Effect of Rare Earth Ion Substitution on Phase Decomposition of Apatite Structure

Author:

Sharma Geeta1ORCID,Loganathan Sarathkumar1,Barimah Eric K.1,Georgopoulou Paraskevi1,Taylor Esther1,Scott Andrew J.1,Strafford Simon1,Jha Animesh1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences School of Chemical and Process Engineering University of Leeds Leeds LS2 9JT United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractThe paper describes an investigation of phase decomposition of apatite lattice doped with rare earth ions (cerium, samarium, and holmium) at temperatures ranging from 25–1200 °C. The rare‐earth ion‐doped apatite minerals were synthesized using the sol‐gel method. In situ high‐temperature powder X‐ray diffraction (XRD) was used to observe the phase changes and the lattice parameters were analyzed to ascertain the crystallographic transformations. The expansion coefficient of the compounds was determined, and it was found that the c‐axis was the most expandable due to relatively weak chemical bonds along the c‐crystallographic axis. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) were used to examine the decomposition properties of the materials. Due to rare earth ion doping, the produced materials had slightly variable decomposition behaviour. The cerium and samarium ions were present in multiple oxidation states (Ce3+, Ce4+, Sm3+, Sm2+), whereas only Ho3+ ions were observed. Rare earth ion substitution affects tri‐calcium phosphate proportion during decomposition by regulating concentrations of vacancies. X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis indicated that cerium and samarium ion‐doped apatite yielded only 25 % tricalcium phosphate during decomposition. This finding advances our understanding of apatite structures, with implications for various high‐temperature processes like calcination, sintering, hydrothermal processing, and plasma spraying.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

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