Web Release Date: February 5,
Structural and Spectroscopic Study of a Novel Erbium Titanate Pink Pigment Prepared by Sol-Gel Methodology
n-López,
Department of Inorganic and Organic Chemistry, Universitat Jaume I, 12071, Castellón, Spain
Received: September 13, 2007
In Final Form: November 28, 2007
Abstract:
Pyrochlore oxides show a large variety of physical and chemical properties depending on the ordering/disordering of the cations and oxygen vacancies. Taking account of these structural features and the luminescent
properties of lanthanides, a new family of colored materials is investigated. This paper studies the structural
evolution of the erbium titanate system with temperature to establish its influence on the color properties.
The success on the development of color is completely related to the sol-gel preparation method, underlining
its higher reactivity compared to classical solid-state synthesis. After firing at 700
C, the sol-gel material
develops an intense pink coloration whose intensity significantly diminishes at 800
C. X-ray diffraction and
Rietveld refinements indicated the presence of nanocrystals with a fluorite-like structure at 700
C, responsible
for the intense coloration, which suffers a gradual atomic rearrangement toward an "ideal" pyrochlore phase.
These results were corroborated by infrared and Raman measurements. UV-vis spectroscopy showed the
influence of the Er3+-O bond covalence on the spectral properties. This study opens new perspectives to the
development of more ecological colored sol-gel materials based on rare earth elements. Furthermore, the
combination of the optical aspects with the classical pyrochlore properties (magnetization, heat capacity,
conductivity, etc.) would provide new multifunctional materials for advanced applications.
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