TU Darmstadt / ULB / TUprints

Room‐temperature dislocation plasticity in SrTiO₃ tuned by defect chemistry

Stich, Stephan ; Ding, Kuan ; Muhammad, Qaisar Khushi ; Porz, Lukas ; Minnert, Christian ; Rheinheimer, Wolfgang ; Durst, Karsten ; Rödel, Jürgen ; Frömling, Till ; Fang, Xufei (2023):
Room‐temperature dislocation plasticity in SrTiO₃ tuned by defect chemistry. (Publisher's Version)
In: Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 105 (2), pp. 1318-1329. Wiley, e-ISSN 1551-2916,
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00023235,
[Article]

[img] Text
Journal of the American Ceramic Society - 2021 - Stich - Room‐temperature dislocation plasticity in SrTiO3 tuned by defect.pdf
Copyright Information: CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International - Creative Commons, Attribution NonCommercial, NoDerivs.

Download (1MB)
[img] Text (Supporting information)
jace18118-sup-0001-suppmat.docx
Copyright Information: CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International - Creative Commons, Attribution NonCommercial, NoDerivs.

Download (1MB)
Item Type: Article
Origin: Secondary publication service
Status: Publisher's Version
Title: Room‐temperature dislocation plasticity in SrTiO₃ tuned by defect chemistry
Language: English
Abstract:

Dislocations have been identified to modify both the functional and mechanical properties of some ceramic materials. Succinct control of dislocation-based plasticity in ceramics will also demand knowledge about dislocation interaction with point defects. Here, we propose an experimental approach to modulate the dislocation-based plasticity in single-crystal SrTiO₃ based on the concept of defect chemistry engineering, for example, by increasing the oxygen vacancy concentration via reduction treatment. With nanoindentation and bulk compression tests, we find that the dislocation-governed plasticity is significantly modified at the nano-/microscale, compared to the bulk scale. The increase in oxygen vacancy concentration after reduction treatment was assessed by impedance spectroscopy and is found to favor dislocation nucleation but impede dislocation motion as rationalized by the nanoindentation pop-in and nanoindentation creep tests.

Journal or Publication Title: Journal of the American Ceramic Society
Volume of the journal: 105
Issue Number: 2
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Publisher: Wiley
Uncontrolled Keywords: defect chemistry engineering, dislocation plasticity, nanoindentation, oxygen vacancy, strontium titanate
Classification DDC: 500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik > 530 Physik
500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik > 540 Chemie
Divisions: 11 Department of Materials and Earth Sciences > Material Science > Nonmetallic-Inorganic Materials
Date Deposited: 15 Feb 2023 13:24
Last Modified: 25 May 2023 06:24
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00023235
Corresponding Links:
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-232359
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/23235
PPN: 507936647
Export:
Actions (login required)
View Item View Item