RESUMO
Long-time electric field action on perovskite piezoelectric ceramic leads to chemical degradation. A new way to accelerate the degradation is the exposure of the ceramic to DC electric fields under a vacuum. A high-quality commercial piezoelectric material based on PbZr1-xTixO3 is used to study such impacts. To avoid the influence of ferroelectric properties and possible removal of oxygen and lead oxides during the degradation process, the experiments are in the temperature interval of 500 °C > T > TC. Changes in resistance during the electrodegradation process is an electrically-induced deoxidation, transforming the ceramic into a metallic-like material. This occurs with an extremely low concentration of effused oxygen of 1016 oxygen atoms per 1 cm3. Due to this concentration not obeying the Mott criterion for an isolator-metal transition, it is stated that the removal of oxygen mostly occurs along the grain boundaries. It agrees with the first-principle calculations regarding dislocations with oxygen vacancies. The decrease in resistivity during electrodegradation follows a power law and is associated with a decrease in the dislocation dimension. The observed reoxidation process is a lifeline for the reconstructing (self-healing) properties of electro-degraded ceramics in harsh cosmic conditions. Based on all of these investigations, a macroscopic and nanoscopic model of the electrodegradation is presented.
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The estimation of microbiological quality of seasoning purchased in the retail network was the aim of this work. The study included five kinds of seasoning manufactured by four Polish companies. Microbiological analysis of the material included: total count of mesophilic aerobic bacteria and their spores, count of yeast and moulds and occurrence of coliforms bacteria, E. coli, Salmonella sp. and S. aureus. The results showed that the total count of mesophilic aerobic bacteria was high (10(5) -10(6) cfu x g(-1)) in the most of estimated spices and bacteria occurred mainly as spores. The low titre of coliform reduced down to 10(-2)-10(-3), occurrence of E. coli it was stated in 20% of samples of spices. However no pathogenic bacteria (Salmonella sp., S. aureus) was detected. Contamination of seasoning by yeasts and moulds was low in majority of samples and only in two samples the count of moulds was higher than 10(3) cfu x g(-1) and not answered requirements. Moulds were mainly represented by Aspergillus sp. (A. glaucus, A. niger, A. flavus) and than by Penicillium sp. and Rhizopus sp. Microbiological quality of seasoning was differentiated in dependence on the manufacturer.
Assuntos
Contaminação de Alimentos/análise , Microbiologia de Alimentos , Especiarias/microbiologia , Contagem de Colônia Microbiana , PolôniaRESUMO
The electrical properties of SrTiO3(100) single crystals were investigated in-situ at different stages of thermal reduction by means of a 4-tip STM. Using the tips of the STM as electrical probes, distance-dependent four-point measurements were performed at the surface of the crystal at room temperature after reduction by thermal treatment. For annealing temperatures T ≤ 700 °C, charge transport is confined to a surface region <3 µm below the surface. For reduction at T ≥ 900 °C a transition from a conducting 2D sheet with insulating bulk to a system with dominant 3D bulk conductivity is found. At an intermediate reduction temperature of T = 800 °C, a regime with mixed 2D/3D contributions is observed in the distance-dependent resistance measurements. Describing the depth-dependent conductivity with an analytical N-layer model, this regime of mixed 2D/3D conductivity is evaluated quantitatively under the assumption of an exponentially decaying conductivity profile, correlated with the previously observed depth-dependent dislocation density in the sample. A non-monotonous temperature dependence of the 3D conductivity in the respective conducting layer is found and possible underlying mechanisms are discussed, particularly with regard to non-intrinsic material properties depending on details of the sample preparation.
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Electroreduction experiments on metal oxides are well established for investigating the nature of the material change in memresistive devices, whose basic working principle is an electrically-induced reduction. While numerous research studies on this topic have been conducted, the influence of extended defects such as dislocations has not been addressed in detail hitherto. Here, we show by employing thermal microscopy to detect local Joule heating effects in the first stage of electroreduction of SrTiO3 that the current is channelled along extended defects such as dislocations which were introduced mechanically by scratching or sawing. After prolonged degradation, the matrix of the crystal is also electroreduced and the influence of the initially present dislocations diminished. At this stage, a hotspot at the anode develops due to stoichiometry polarisation leading not only to the gliding of existing dislocations, but also to the evolution of new dislocations. Such a formation is caused by electrical and thermal stress showing dislocations may play a significant role in resistive switching effects.
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Controlling the work function of transition metal oxides is of key importance with regard to future energy production and storage. As the majority of applications involve the use of heterostructures, the most suitable characterization technique is Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM), which provides excellent energetic and lateral resolution. In this paper, we demonstrate precise characterization of the work function using the example of artificially formed crystalline titanium monoxide (TiO) nanowires on strontium titanate (SrTiO3) surfaces, providing a sharp atomic interface. The measured value of 3.31(21) eV is the first experimental work function evidence for a cubic TiO phase, where significant variations among the different crystallographic facets were also observed. Despite the remarkable height of the TiO nanowires, KPFM was implemented to achieve a high lateral resolution of 15 nm, which is close to the topographical limit. In this study, we also show the unique possibility of obtaining work function and conductivity maps on the same area by combining noncontact and contact modes of atomic force microscopy (AFM). As most of the real applications require ambient operating conditions, we have additionally checked the impact of air venting on the work function of the TiO/SrTiO3(100) heterostructure, proving that surface reoxidation occurs and results in a work function increase of 0.9 eV and 0.6 eV for SrTiO3 and TiO, respectively. Additionally, the influence of adsorbed surface species was estimated to contribute 0.4 eV and 0.2 eV to the work function of both structures. The presented method employing KPFM and local conductivity AFM for the characterization of the work function of transition metal oxides may help in understanding the impact of reduction and oxidation on electronic properties, which is of high importance in the development of effective sensing and catalytic devices.
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Reduced titanium oxide structures are regarded as promising materials for various catalytic and optoelectronic applications. There is thus an urgent need for developing methods of controllable formation of crystalline nanostructures with tunable oxygen nonstoichiometry. We introduce the Extremely Low Oxygen Partial Pressure (ELOP) method, employing an oxygen getter in close vicinity to an oxide during thermal reduction under vacuum, as an effective bottom-up method for the production of nanowires arranged in a nanoscale metallic network on a SrTiO3 perovskite surface. We demonstrate that the TiO nanowires crystallize in a highly ordered cubic phase, where single nanowires are aligned along the main crystallographic directions of the SrTiO3 substrate. The dimensions of the nanostructures are easily tunable from single nanometers up to the mesoscopic range by varying the temperature of reduction. The interface between TiO and SrTiO3 (metal and insulator) was found to be atomically sharp providing the unique possibility of the investigation of electronic states, especially since the high conductivity of the TiO nanostructures is maintained after room temperature oxidation. According to the growth model we propose, TiO nanowire formation is possible due to the incongruent sublimation of strontium and crystallographic shearing, triggered by the extremely low oxygen partial pressure (ELOP). The controlled formation of conductive nanowires on a perovskite surface holds technological potential for implementation in memristive devices, organic electronics, or for catalytic applications, and provides insight into the mechanism of nanoscale phase transformations in metal oxides. We believe that the ELOP mechanism of suboxide formation is suitable for the formation of reduced suboxides on other perovskite oxides and for the broader class of transition metal oxides.
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We report on qualitative and quantitative implications of the sample-tip interaction in piezoresponse force microscopy. Our finite-element analysis of adsorbate effects, sample heterogeneities, and tip asymmetries is in agreement with experimental observation of ferroelectric nanostructures. Qualitative discrepancies arise from locally asymmetric tip-sample interaction. Any quantitative determination of field-related material parameters as required for the verification of semiempirical models of the ferroelectric limit typically relies on an overestimated field across the sample. Our findings indicate that adsorbates reduce the actual field across the nanograin by roughly one order of magnitude.
Assuntos
Eletroquímica/métodos , Microscopia de Força Atômica/métodos , Modelos Químicos , Nanoestruturas/química , Nanoestruturas/ultraestrutura , Simulação por Computador , Impedância Elétrica , Eletroquímica/instrumentação , Campos Eletromagnéticos , Teste de Materiais , Nanoestruturas/efeitos da radiação , Tamanho da PartículaRESUMO
The great variability in the electrical properties of multinary oxide materials, ranging from insulating, through semiconducting to metallic behaviour, has given rise to the idea of modulating the electronic properties on a nanometre scale for high-density electronic memory devices. A particularly promising aspect seems to be the ability of perovskites to provide bistable switching of the conductance between non-metallic and metallic behaviour by the application of an appropriate electric field. Here we demonstrate that the switching behaviour is an intrinsic feature of naturally occurring dislocations in single crystals of a prototypical ternary oxide, SrTiO(3). The phenomenon is shown to originate from local modulations of the oxygen content and to be related to the self-doping capability of the early transition metal oxides. Our results show that extended defects, such as dislocations, can act as bistable nanowires and hold technological promise for terabit memory devices.