固溶体
材料科学
结晶学
理论(学习稳定性)
分析化学(期刊)
化学
物理化学
冶金
计算机科学
色谱法
机器学习
作者
Suneet Kale,Alexander E. Sedykh,Prajna Bhatt,Aysha A. Riaz,P. Thakur,Tien‐Lin Lee,Anna Regoutz,Maren Lepple,Christina S. Birkel
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.chemmater.5c00888
摘要
MAX phase carbides have attracted much attention due to their unique combination of metallic and ceramic properties, making them promising materials for high-temperature applications. Understanding how the materials fail is a crucial step in working toward implementing them into devices outside of the laboratory setting. Their stability toward oxidation at high temperatures, while also being electronically and thermally conductive, sets MAX phases apart from other materials. Some aluminum-containing compounds form a protective alumina layer that contributes to the oxidation resistance of the respective MAX phase. However, a broader understanding of how other MAX phases, especially those with M-elements beyond titanium and A-elements beyond aluminum, oxidize is lacking. Therefore, we synthesized two A-site solid solutions (gallium and germanium as the A-elements) based on chromium and vanadium as M-elements by high-temperature solid-state syntheses. Their composition, structural properties, and bonding characteristics are investigated by synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy with elemental analysis, and Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Thermal analysis reveals the influence of the M- and A-elements on the oxidation behavior: phases with Cr on the M-site have higher oxidation stability than with V, and solid solutions Cr2Ga1–xGexC have improved oxidation resistance compared to the individual phases Cr2GaC and Cr2GeC.
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