Have a personal or library account? Click to login
DC electrical conduction in strontium vanadium borate glasses Cover

DC electrical conduction in strontium vanadium borate glasses

Open Access
|Oct 2020

Abstract

A series of borate glasses with the composition x(SrO)·(50 – x)V2O5·0.5(B2O3) where x = 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4 were prepared by melt-quenching technique. The non-crystalline nature of the glasses has been established by XRD studies. Room temperature density and DC electrical conductivity of the samples were investigated in the temperature range of 300 K to 443 K. The molar volume and oxygen packing density (OPD) were estimated. The results show that the density, molar volume and OPD decrease with the increasing of SrO mole fraction. The DC electrical conductivity data has been analyzed in the light of Mott’s small polaron hopping (SPH) model and the activation energies were estimated. The conductivity was observed to rapidly fall and activation energy was found to increase when SrO was incorporated into the glass network. This may indicate that Sr+ ions have not contributed to the total conductivity and the observed conductivity may be of polaronic type only, which is due to the hopping of electrons between multivalent states of vanadium. Various small polaron hopping parameters such as small polaron radius, rp, effective dielectric constant, ϵp, polaron band width, J, optical phonon frequency, υo, small polaron coupling constant, γp, density of states at Fermi level, N(EF) were estimated and discussed.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/msp-2020-0022 | Journal eISSN: 2083-134X | Journal ISSN: 2083-1331
Language: English
Page range: 359 - 366
Submitted on: Nov 3, 2018
|
Accepted on: Apr 23, 2019
|
Published on: Oct 6, 2020
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2020 Arunkumar V. Banagar, M. Prashant Kumar, N. Nagaraja, Anand Tipperudra, Sangamesh Jakati, published by Wroclaw University of Science and Technology
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.