Abstract

Two compositions of BaTiO3 positive temperature coefficient of resistance ceramics, prepared identically except for the fact that a small addition of Mn (0.04 at. %) was made to one of them, were studied. The samples were sintered simultaneously in air at 1400 °C for 1 h and then annealed at 1200 ° for 5 h, using a muffle furnace. Room-temperature dielectric measurements in the audio- and radio-frequency ranges confirmed that Mn has a negligible effect on the bulk resistance. Arrhenius plots of resistivity vs 1/[Tε′m(T)] were found to give straight lines for Tc<T<Tmax (where ε′m is the relative permittivity of the specimen measured at a constant frequency of 30 kHz, Tc is the ferroelectric transition temperature, Tmax is the temperature corresponding to the maximum in resistivity, and T is the absolute temperature), in accordance with the well-known Heywang model. The height of the potential barriers at different temperatures, as calculated from the slopes of these plots, were found to increase by about 40% (from ∼0.34 to ∼0.50 eV) by the addition of Mn. A small increase in the acceptor-state density at the grain surfaces, which was again obtained from these plots, was observed in Mn-doped specimens (3.9×1013 cm−2 as compared to 2.7×1013 for Mn-free specimens). It was also found that the inclusion of Mn had a negligible effect on ε′m above Tc.

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