Chemistry (Apr 2024)

NEXAFS and XPS Studies of Co Doped Bismuth Magnesium Tantalate Pyrochlores

  • Nadezhda A. Zhuk,
  • Boris A. Makeev,
  • Aleksandra V. Koroleva,
  • Sergey V. Nekipelov,
  • Olga V. Petrova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/chemistry6020018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 323 – 332

Abstract

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Co doped bismuth magnesium tantalate with a pyrochlore structure (sp. gr. Fd-3m) was synthesized for the first time using the standard ceramic method. Single phase Bi2Mg1−xCoxTa2O9 samples were found to be formed when x 4 (sp. gr. P-1) is detected, and its amount is proportional to the degree of cobalt doping. The formation of solid solutions is evidenced by a uniform increase in the unit cell parameter of the Co,Mg co doped bismuth tantalate phase with an increase in the content of cobalt ions in the samples from 10.5412(8) (x = 0.3) to 10.5499(8) Å (x = 0.7). The samples exhibit a porous microstructure consisting of chaotically oriented and partially fused elongated grains measuring 1–2 μm. The dependence of the ceramic grain size on the n(Mg)/n(Co) ratio was not determined. X-ray spectroscopy (ear dge X-ray bsorption ine tructure (NEXAFS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS)) was used to study the charge state of ions in Bi2Mg1−xCoxTa2O9. The NEXAFS and XPS data showed that doping with cobalt and magnesium did not change the bismuth and tantalum oxidation states in pyrochlore; in particular, the ions maintained their oxidation states of Bi(+3), Mg(+2) and Ta(+5). The energy position of the peaks of the Ta4f-, Ta5p-, Ta4d spectra had a characteristic shift towards lower energies compared to the binding energy in pentavalent tantalum oxide Ta2O5. A shift towards lower energies is characteristic of a decrease in the effective positive charge; in particular, for the Ta4f and Ta4d spectra we presented, this energy shift was ΔE = 0.65 eV, and in the region of the Ta4d edge—0.55 eV. This in turn allowed for us to assume that tantalum atoms have the same effective charge +(5-δ). The oxidation state of cobalt ions was predominantly 2+ and partially 3+, according to NEXAFS spectroscopy data.

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