Artículos de revistas
Novel approaches of nanoceria with magnetic, photoluminescent, and gas-sensing properties
Fecha
2020-06-15Registro en:
2470-1343
doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b04250
0000-0002-6059-2197
0000-0002-7523-6013
0000-0003-0275-0043
0000-0002-2681-1579
0000-0002-0262-7718
0000-0003-1300-4978
0000-0001-8062-7791
0000-0003-2535-2187
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
The modification of CeO2 with rare-earth elements opens up a wide range of applications as biomedical devices using infrared emission as well as magnetic and gas-sensing devices, once the structural, morphological, photoluminescent, magnetic, electric, and gassensing properties of these systems are strongly correlated to quantum electronic transitions between rare-earth f-states among defective species. Quantitative phase analysis revealed that the nanopowders are free from secondary phases and crystallize in the fluorite-type cubic structure. Magnetic coercive field measurements on the powders indicate that the substitution of cerium with lanthanum (8 wt %), in a fluorite-type cubic structure, created oxygen vacancies and led to a decrease in the fraction of Ce species in the 3+ state, resulting in a stronger roomtemperature ferromagnetic response along with high coercivity (160 Oe). In addition to the magnetic and photoluminescent behavior, a fast response time (5.5 s) was observed after CO exposure, indicating that the defective structure of ceria-based materials corresponds to the key of success in terms of applications using photoluminescent, magnetic, or electrical behaviors.