Journal of the European Ceramic Society, v.42, no.4, pp.1388 - 1395
Abstract
Dielectrics for automobile applications generally require high temperature reliability. Bi1/2Na1/2TiO3-based materials are excellent high-temperature dielectric candidates with relatively large temperature-insensitive dielectric responses and a maximum dielectric permittivity temperature as high as 300 °C. However, they suffer from a high dielectric loss that increases exponentially above 200 °C due to ionic conduction from thermally activated oxygen vacancy migration. Here, we demonstrate that the impact of ionic conduction on dielectric loss can be effectively suppressed by introducing a sodium deficiency and thermal annealing An appropriate combination of both treatments elevated the temperature insensitivity of the dielectric loss up to ∼ 300 °C. A systematic investigation using impedance spectroscopy correlated with microstructure analysis revealed that the sodium deficiency and thermal annealing affected the mobile oxygen vacancy concentration differently.