Published 2013
| Version v1
Publication
Phase stability study of the pseudobinary system Gd2O2CO3–Nd2O2CO3 (420 °C ≤ T ≤ 850 °C, P = 1 atm. CO2)
Description
Hexagonal as well as tetragonal rare earth oxycarbonates
can act as hosts for optically active ions; hence,
the knowledge of the structural modifications occurring
when foreign hosts are inserted into the parent compound is
of fundamental importance for the design of new phosphors.
In this article, a phase stability study of the pseudobinary
system Gd2O2CO3–Nd2O2CO3 at P = 1 atm. CO2 between
420 and 850 C is presented, to study the amplitude of
the existence fields of the different structures typical of rare
earth oxycarbonates. The samples were prepared by thermal
decomposition of the corresponding oxalates in CO2 atmosphere.
According to composition and temperature, all the
three structural forms reported for oxycarbonates (hexagonal,
tetragonal, and monoclinic) have been observed. Above
a certain temperature, that depends on composition and
increases with Nd amount, all the samples decompose into
the corresponding Gd–Nd-mixed oxides and crystallize into
one of the three possible structural forms typical of rare
earth sesquioxides. Structural refinements performed on the
hexagonal oxycarbonates demonstrate that the insertion
of Nd3? in Gd2O2CO3 results in a linear increase of the
lattice parameters (Vegard's law) and in a reorganization of
the distances between and in the CO3 2- groups and the
(Nd/Gd2O2)2? layers.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/543049
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/543049