Abstract

Powders of BaY x Ce 1 − x O 3 − δ ( x = 0, 0.1 and 0.15) with specific surface area of 6–8 m 2g − 1 (BET equivalent particle size of 130–160 nm) were prepared by a modified solid-state route using nanocrystalline BaCO 3 and CeO 2 raw materials. These powders showed excellent densification at relatively low temperatures. Dense (96–97% relative density) ceramics with submicron grain size (0–4–0.6 µm) were obtained after sintering at 1250–1280 °C. Ceramics sintered at 1450 °C revealed only a moderate grain growth (grain size ≤ 2 µm), uniform microstructure and very high density (≥ 98%). The total conductivity of the submicron ceramics at 600 °C was comparable with the reference values reported in the literature, meaning that the high number of grain boundaries was not a limiting factor. On lowering temperature, the contribution of the blocking grain boundaries becomes progressively more important and the conductivity decreases in comparison to coarse-grained ceramics. Microscopic conductivities of grain interior and grain boundary are the same irrespective of grain size meaning that the different macroscopic behaviour is only determined by a geometric factor (a trivial size effect).

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