Publication | Closed Access
Direct‐Current Conductivity and Iron Tracer Diffusion in Hematite at High Temperatures
70
Citations
6
References
1972
Year
O Partial PressureMagnetic PropertiesEngineeringSolid-state ChemistryMineral-fluid InteractionIron Tracer DiffusionPartial PressureHigh Temperature GeochemistryMaterials ScienceCrystalline DefectsOxide ElectronicsIntrinsic ImpurityHigh TemperaturesFerromagnetismDiffusion ResistanceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsDirect‐current ConductivityIron Tracer
The dc conductivity of natural single‐crystal α‐Fe 2 O 3 was measured as a function of O partial pressure from 10 −4 to 1 atm at 950° to 1422°C. The conductivity was independent of O 2 partial pressure, indicating that hematite is an intrinsic semiconductor with lattice defect concentrations much lower than the concentration of intrinsic electrons (holes). The activation energy of the dc conductivity was 1.18 eV. The iron tracer ( 55 Fe) diffusion coefficients, measured as a function of O 2 partial pressure at 1200° and 1300°C, increased as the O 2 partial pressure decreased, with a pressure dependence of ‐0.75; the iron therefore migrates interstitially.
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