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Article

Synthesis Mechanism of Low-Voltage Praseodymium Oxide Doped Zinc Oxide Varistor Ceramics Prepared Through Modified Citrate Gel Coating

1
Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology Laboratory, Institute of Advanced Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 UPM Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia
2
Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 UPM Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2012, 13(4), 5278-5289; https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijms13045278
Submission received: 20 February 2012 / Revised: 31 March 2012 / Accepted: 12 April 2012 / Published: 24 April 2012
(This article belongs to the Section Materials Science)

Abstract

:
High demands on low-voltage electronics have increased the need for zinc oxide (ZnO) varistors with fast response, highly non-linear current-voltage characteristics and energy absorption capabilities at low breakdown voltage. However, trade-off between breakdown voltage and grain size poses a critical bottle-neck in the production of low-voltage varistors. The present study highlights the synthesis mechanism for obtaining praseodymium oxide (Pr6O11) based ZnO varistor ceramics having breakdown voltages of 2.8 to 13.3 V/mm through employment of direct modified citrate gel coating technique. Precursor powder and its ceramics were examined by means of TG/DTG, FTIR, XRD and FESEM analyses. The electrical properties as a function of Pr6O11 addition were analyzed on the basis of I-V characteristic measurement. The breakdown voltage could be adjusted from 0.01 to 0.06 V per grain boundary by controlling the amount of Pr6O11 from 0.2 to 0.8 mol%, without alteration of the grain size. The non-linearity coefficient, α, varied from 3.0 to 3.5 and the barrier height ranged from 0.56 to 0.64 eV. Breakdown voltage and α lowering with increasing Pr6O11 content were associated to reduction in the barrier height caused by variation in O vacancies at grain boundary.

1. Introduction

Applications of low-voltage varistors for circuit protection are increasingly significant due to growing demands on low-voltage electronics. For instance, battery powered and mobile appliances require protection from transient voltage of between 4 to 20 V (dc voltage) while many communication devices need fast response protection from transient voltage of 22 –68.V [13]. These factors create needs for continuous development of ZnO varistor materials with fast response, highly non-linear current-voltage characteristics and energy absorption capabilities at low breakdown voltage.
Meanwhile, trade-offs between breakdown voltage, Eb, and grain size, d, in conventional bismuth (Bi2O3) based ZnO ceramics poses a critical bottle-neck in production of low-voltage varistors. This is because the effective breakdown voltage of a varistor is proportionate to the number of grain boundaries per unit thickness and the inverse to grain size. Consequently, lowering the breakdown voltage in Bi2O3-ZnO varistor having average breakdown voltage per individual grain boundary, Vgb, of approximately 3.2–3.5 V is a great challenge [46].
Most existing preparation techniques rely strongly on ZnO grain manipulation processes. The most classical ways of making low-voltage varistors are through grain coarsening techniques by making varistor from crushed ceramics, prolonged sintering processes at higher temperatures and adding grain growth enhancers such as TiO2 [7]. Other ways include employment of seeding technique by using grown ZnO crystal seeds as precursor [810] and deposition technique to fabricate multilayered thin film varistors with interdigitated electrodes [11]. Grain coarsening and seeding techniques could be economically less feasible as they are energy intensive processes and suffer from inhomogeneous microstructure which leads to inconsistent current-voltage characteristics [8]. Multilayered thin film varistors obtained from deposition technique on the other hands, are lingered with structural integrity issues [11]. The present work has discovered that it is possible to obtain low-voltage varistors made of praseodymium (Pr6O11) based ZnO ceramics through employment of a solution coating technique known as direct modified citrate gel coating. The technique involves coating of additive precursor in citrate gel form onto fine ZnO particles and proceeds with calcination and sintering processes. Similar methods using different starting materials, medium and deposition sequences have been adopted previously in [1214] for obtaining both low and high-voltage varistors but limited to Bi2O3–ZnO systems. Advantages of this preparation approach are for example:
  • Offer direct chemical route to prepare metal oxide ceramics at reduced sintering temperature and time in comparison to conventional solid state route or several chemical techniques such as sol-gel and co-precipitation [1215].
  • Ability to control the homogeneity of solutions particularly during preparation of multi-components ceramic materials through prevention of side precipitation or sedimentation [14,15].
  • Improve distribution of dopants and facilitate diffusion of additives on ZnO grains by encouraging contact during precursor preparation [14].
  • Improve grain size consistency by controlling the formation of ultrafine grains and abnormal grain growth [13].
Pr6O11 based ZnO ceramics are the materials of interest for this study. Based on the recent trend, Pr6O11 based ZnO ceramics have been actively researched to overcome drawbacks in existing Bi2O3 based ZnO varistor materials such as Bi2O3 vaporization and formation of Bi-containing secondary phases when sintered at temperatures over 1000 °C [1620]. Ramirez et al., [16] and Furtado et al., [17] demonstrated that Pr6O11 improved effective electrical current flow by restraining the formation of secondary phases and induced densification of varistor during fabrication. Zhu et al., [18] claimed that Pr6O11 exhibited grain growth suppressing effect that controlled the overall development of grain during sintering. Thus, their studied varistor ceramics had more uniform and compact microstructures. Several series of high density and high stability Pr6O11 based ZnO varistor ceramic systems containing more than four combination of rare earth and transition metal oxides have been developed and reported in Nahm [19,20]. The proposed varistors exhibited comparable non-linearity properties to that of Bi2O3 based ZnO varistors with minimum number of additives. The non-linearity coefficient of the varistors could reach up to 60 with the general Vgb of 2–3 V. However, most of the Pr6O11 based ZnO varistor systems that have been reported so far are developed towards high-voltage applications. The work by Horio et al., [21] is one of the very few attempts to extend the use of Pr6O11 based ZnO ceramics for low-voltage applications. They have successfully fabricated ZnO/Pr6O11 multilayered thin films having the non-linearity coefficient, α of 10 and Eb of 20 V by the radio-frequency (RF) sputtering in Ar/O2 environment. Hence, further research is needed in order to take advantage of these potentially high non-linearity and high stability ceramic materials for satisfying low-voltage requirements.
The purposes of this study are to develop Pr6O11 based ZnO varistors by modified citrate gel coating technique for low-voltage applications and comprehensively investigate synthesis mechanisms involved throughout the preparation steps. In this work, a single-doped system containing ZnO and varied Pr6O11 content has been prepared. The precursor powder was studied with various methods including ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, TG-DTG, XRD and FESEM analyses. Meanwhile, the varistor ceramics were characterized using XRD and FESEM. The electrical properties of the ceramics were discussed on the basis of I-V characteristic measurement.

2. Results and Discussion

2.1. Chemical, Thermal and Microstructure Analysis of Precursor Powder

In agreement with the work by Lorenz et al., [14], Pr(III) acetate salt reacted with one of the three carboxylic groups in citric acid to produce Pr(III) citrate complexes according to the following reaction;
3 ( C 6 H 5 O 7 - ) + Pr 3 + + 3 H + 60 - 70 ° C Pr 3 + [ C 6 H 5 O 7 - ] 3 + 3 H +
The uncoordinated carboxylic chains chelated on the ZnO particles dispersing in the solution to form firmed citrate gel coating layer. The layer was thermally converted during calcination process at 500 °C for 4 h and sintering process at 1200 °C for 1 h according to the following oxidation reaction.
2 Pr ( C 6 H 5 O 7 ) + 49 2 O 2 500 ° C , 4 h in Air Pr CO 3 OH + 34 CO 2 + 15 H 2 O
6 Pr CO 3 OH + 13 2 O 2 1200 ° C , 1 h in Air Pr 6 O 11 + 6 CO 2 + 3 H 2 O
Complete formation of Pr6O11 from PrCO3OH intermediate was achieved during sintering at 1200 °C. The synthesis mechanism was confirmed by Attenuated Total Reflectance Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), Thermogravimetry/Differential Thermogravimetry (TG/DTG) and X-ray Diffractometer (XRD) analyses. The morphology of precursor powder was observed under Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FESEM).

2.1.1. ATR-FTIR

IR spectra of both non-calcined precursor powder in Figure 1a and calcined powder in Figure 1b were compared to spectra of pure Pr6O11 (Figure 1c) as well as ZnO (Figure 1d). It was found that the non-calcined precursor powder contained ZnO and Pr complexes. The asymmetrical and symmetrical stretching vibrations of carboxyl (–COO) in Pr citrate complexes was respectively observed at 1386 and 1590 cm−1. The result was consistent with [15]. The disappearance of several characteristic peaks in the region of 600–2500 cm−1 in the spectrum of calcined powder shown in Figure 1b were associated to elimination of carbonyl (C=O), carboxylate and alkyl groups at high temperature. The emergence of unidented carbonate group (-CO3) was supported by a new in-plane deformation vibration peak at 716 cm−1, asymmetrical stretching vibration peak at 1400 cm−1 and symmetrical vibration peak at 1794 cm−1 [22,23]. The presence of Pr-O lattice vibration mode at 655 cm−1 and other characteristic peaks of Pr6O11 (852, 1169 and 1519 cm−1) were also detected in the calcined powder spectrum [22]. Therefore, it is supported that Pr citrate gel layer coating the ZnO particles started to transform into Pr6O11 layer upon calcination.

2.1.2. TG/DTG

TG/DTG curves in Figure 2 depict the decomposition profile of pure Pr citrate gel powder and coated ZnO precursor powder. Based on Figure 2a, the pure Pr citrate gel powder decomposed in four major steps as signified by derivative weight loss peaks at 71, 180, 300 and 383 °C, respectively. The first decomposition stage within the range of 32–139 °C was associated to the removal of physically trapped moisture. The subsequent process occurring between 140–266 °C was assigned to the rapid decomposition of excess citric acid. The citrates of Pr gel started to degrade within the temperature range of 266–334 °C to form stable phase of intermediate carbonates and/or oxides. Gradual and continuous weight loss beyond 334 °C was caused by slow decomposition of carbonates to oxides and overlapping decomposition of citrates in the previous stage. Figure 2b shows decomposition of coated ZnO precursor powder occurring in two stages respectively at 89 °C and 364 °C. The first stage was associated to simultaneous evaporation of moisture and excess citric acid. Meanwhile, the later was attributed to concurrent release of citrate anion and decomposition of carbonates. Decomposition trend of Pr citrate gel observed in this study was comparable to other metal citrate complexes reported in [22,23].

2.1.3. XRD

XRD analysis of the calcination product in Figure 3 identified the presence of Pr carbonate hydroxide (PrCO3OH) phase (ICSD Reference code 00-026-1349) and traces of Pr6O11 phase (ICSD Reference code 00-042-1121) coexisting with hexagonal wurtzite ZnO phase (ICSD Reference code 01-075-0576). In comparison, initial powder consisted of mostly ZnO phase. Therefore, the phase analysis suggested that precursor powder after calcination contained mixture of ZnO, PrCO3OH and Pr6O11 phases.

2.1.4. FESEM

Figure 4 shows the morphology of precursor powder after calcination. The exterior of ZnO were adequately covered with layer of nano-scaled particles mostly PrCO3OH and Pr6O11 phases as confirmed in XRD analysis. The observation suggested that effective mixing of varistor precursor components has been achieved through optimal distribution of additive prior to sintering process. This technique simplified the process to achieve homogeneous mixture in comparison to typical demanding and time-consuming mechanical ball milling steps.
TG/DTG, ATR-FTIR, XRD and FESEM analyses suggested that ZnO particles have been successfully coated with Pr citrate gel. The gel was transformed to intermediate phase of Pr carbonates through calcination process. Partial cystallization of Pr oxide was also taken place during the calcination process.

2.2. Microstructure and Electrical Characteristics of Sintered Ceramics

2.2.1. XRD

Figure 5 shows the XRD patterns of sintered ceramic sample comprising different Pr6O11 contents. The patterns confirmed the presence of dominant ZnO phase (ICSD Reference code 01-075-0576) with hexagonal wurtzite structure and cubic Pr6O11 phase (ICSD Reference code 00-042-1121) in all samples with no evidence of secondary phases. Traces of Pr2O3 (ICSD Reference code 00-022-0880) phase identified in samples were probably formed as a result of redox reaction in Pr6O11 at high temperature. Disappearance of peaks assigning to PrCO3OH phase suggested the complete conversion of Pr citrate gel layer on ZnO into Pr6O11.

2.2.2. FESEM

FESEM micrograph in Figure 6 represents the microstructure of sintered ceramic surface for ZnO varistor with 0.8 mol % Pr6O11. The bright spots on the ceramic surface indicated the area with heavier element like Pr. Spectra obtained from Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDAX) line scan across two neighboring grains indicated that the concentration of Pr was increasing towards the grain boundary. Otherwise, the concentration of Zn and O were decreasing. This observation proposed that preferential distribution of Pr at grain boundaries was achieved and such microstructures are intended for formation of Schottky barrier that is responsible for the non-linearity behavior.

2.2.3. I-V Characteristics

Table 1 shows the microstructure and non-linearity characteristic parameters of sintered ceramics. Pr6O11 doped ZnO varistors obtained from citrate gel coating technique had compact microstructures and were composed of fine grains. The average relative densities of ceramics exceeded 95% of theroretical density of bulk ZnO (5.61 g/cm3) while the average grain size was in the range of 4.5 to 5.2.μm. The result is consistent with [19,20]. I-V measurement revealed that α1 calculated from slope at low current region (10–100 mA/cm2) was in the range of 1.8–3.1. However, the α2 value measured at high current region (100–200 mA/cm2) ranged from 3.0 to 3.5. Both α1 and α2 values decreased with Pr6O11 content. Marginal drop observed in α2 value with respect to Pr6O11 content was attributed to the shifting in voltage at onset of non-linearity. Varistor containing less amount of Pr6O11 exhibited non-linear characteristic at relatively lower onset voltage than the varistor with high Pr6O11 content. The Eb varies between 2.8–13.3 V and the value drastically decreased with the Pr6O11 content. With an average grain size of approximately 5.0 μm, the corresponding Vgb dropped from 0.06 to 0.01 V as the Pr6O11 content was increased from 0.2 to 0.8 mol %. The range of Vgb was relatively lower than the general Vgb (2–3 V) for high-voltage Pr6O11 based ZnO varistor reported in [19,20], but in a good agreement with Vgb range for several low-voltage varistor systems developed in [24,25]. The decreasing trend in interface barrier height, ϕB was also noted. The value dropped from 0.64 to 0.56. Meanwhile, the JL value is greatly dependent on the density of ceramic. Ceramic with higher density exhibited lower JL. Reduction in α and Eb with Pr6O11 content could be attributed to formation of O vacancies at grain boundaries. It has been well accepted that the oxygen species can increase the density of interface states at grain boundary, thus improve Schottky barrier height [24,26]. The present case suggested that accumulation of excessive Pr depleted the O species and/or promoted the formation of O vacancies in the grain boundary. As a result, the density of interface states reduced and eventually diminished the interface barrier height. This is consistent with the suppression of barrier height at higher Pr6O11 content and the low O concentration at grain boundary region as observed in EDAX line scanning in Figure 4. In addition, similar observation was reported in the investigation of ZnO/Pr6O11 thin film interface [21]. It was envisioned that oxygen atom could diffuse from Pr6O11 layer into ZnO surface during deposition process.
According to this electrical analysis, it seems that the Eb value could be adjusted by controlling the amount of Pr6O11 in the ceramics. Pr6O11 has served as the grain boundary activator in these single doped varistor systems. In order to obtain higher non-linearity, additional doping with Cr2O3, MnO2 or CoO is required. The contribution of donor concentration and interface states at grain boundary to non-linearity behaviour of low-voltage Pr6O11 based ZnO varistors should be established by further detailed studies.

3. Experimental Section

3.1. Materials

Raw materials were prepared according to the nominal composition of (100 − x) mol % ZnO + x mol % Pr6O11 where x = 0.2, 0.4 and 0.8. Reagent grade praseodymium (III) acetate hydrate (Pr(CH2COOH)3·xH2O) with the purity of 99.9% (Alfa Aesar) was used as metal salt precursor and citric acid anhydrous (C6H8O7) with the purity of 99.5% (Fluka) was selected as the complexing agent. ZnO powder with the particle size of less than 1 μm and 99.9% purity (Sigma Aldrich) was selected as the host material.

3.2. Preparation of Precursor Powder and Ceramics

Uniform coating of Pr citrate gel on ZnO particles was obtained by immersing ZnO powder in bath solution containing citric acid and Pr(III) acetate in deionized water medium for 1 hour retention time at 70–80 °C. Molar ratio of citric acid to Pr acetate was fixed at 3:1 and vigorous stirring was required to improve contact. The mixing process was prolonged for 4 h at 100 °C or until liquid in the mixture dried up. The cake obtained at the end of process was pulverized, sieved and dried at 110 °C for 19 h to produce powder with particle size of less than 100 μm. The dried powder was then calcined at 500 °C for 4 h at heating rate of 3 °C/min. The calcined powder comprising 1.75 wt% polyvinyl alcohol binder was pressed into pellets with 5.0 mm radius and 1.3 mm thickness using Specac Hydraulic Press machine. The pellet was finally sintered at 1200 °C for 1 h in a box furnace (CMTS Model HTS 1400).

3.3. Characterizations

TG/DTG analysis was performed using TGA/DSC-1 Mettler Toledo for examining the thermal decomposition profile of precursor powder. Sample was heated from 30–900 °C in air at 10 °C/min. ATR-FTIR spectroscopy (Thermo Nicolet) was utilized to observe the chemical changes on precursor powder before and after calcination process. As-received sample was pressed against germanium crystal plate and analyzed. Phase analysis was conducted on both calcined and sintered samples using XRD (PANalytical (Philips) X’pert Pro PW3040/60) with Cu source. Sample was radiated with Ni-filtered Cu radiation (λ = 1.5428) within the 2θ scan range of 20–80°. Surface morphology and elemental analyses of precursor powder and sintered samples were studied under FESEM (JEOL JSM-7200) integrated with EDAX. Sample to view was mounted on Al stub using carbon paint and sputter-coated with gold. Current-voltage (I-V) characteristics measurement was carried out on varistor pellets painted with conductive Ag electrode using source measure unit (Keithley 236). Sample was applied with dc voltage from 0 to 100 V in step size of 2.5 V. The non-linearity coefficient, α was determined as d(log J)/d(log E) where J is the current density and E is the electrical field (V/mm). Two α values were determined at different J regions. α1 was measured at low current region which was within the range of 10–100 mA/cm2. α2 was measured at high current region, within 100–200 mA/cm2. The breakdown voltage, Eb was determined as the corresponding E at J = 1 mA/cm2 and the leakage current density, JL was determined as the corresponding J at E = 0.8Eb.Voltage per grain boundary, Vgb was calculated as Eb(d/D) where d is the average grain size calculated based on line intercept method, D is the thickness of the varistor. The interface barrier height, ϕB, was estimated according to the following expression:
J = A T 2 exp [ β E 1 / 2 - ϕ B κ T ]
where J is the current density, E is the field strength, κ is the Boltzmann constant, A is the Richardson’s constant (30 Acm−2K−2) for ZnO, T is the absolute temperature, β is a constant and is related to the relation as ϕB ~ ()−1, where r is grains per unit length and ω is the barrier width. This method has been applied in [27,28].

4. Conclusions

Low-voltage Pr6O11 doped ZnO varistor ceramics have been successfully prepared by direct modified citrate gel coating technique. Pr citrate gel coating layer was transformed to PrCO3OH intermediate and finally converted to nano-scaled Pr6O11 in two steps of oxidation reaction. Uniform coating of Pr6O11 on ZnO powder was achieved after calcining at 500 °C for 4 h. The ceramics obtained after sintering at 1200 °C for 1 h had simple microstructure, high density (95.0–98.8%) and a grain size in the range of 4.5–5.2 μm. Preferential segregation of Pr dopants at grain boundaries was improved. Electrical analysis on the Pr6O11 doped ZnO varistor ceramics demonstrated that the varistor exhibited Eb in the range of 2.8 to 13.3 V. Depending on the Pr6O11 content, the Vgb decreased from 0.06 to 0.01 V with insignificant alteration in the grain size. The α value in high current region (100–200 mA/cm2) ranged from 3.0 to 3.5 and the interface barrier height ranged from 0.56 to 0.64 eV. Eb and α lowering with increasing Pr6O11 content were associated with reduction in the barrier height caused by variation in O vacancies at grain boundary.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to express gratitude and acknowledgement to Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia for funding this project under Research University Grant Scheme (RUGS) of Project No. 05-01-09-0754RU.

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Figure 1. IR spectra of (a) ZnO powder coated with Pr citrate gel before calcination and (b) ZnO powder coated with Pr citrate gel after calcination in comparison to (c) Pr6O11 and (d) ZnO.
Figure 1. IR spectra of (a) ZnO powder coated with Pr citrate gel before calcination and (b) ZnO powder coated with Pr citrate gel after calcination in comparison to (c) Pr6O11 and (d) ZnO.
Ijms 13 05278f1aIjms 13 05278f1b
Figure 2. TG/DTG curves of (a) pure Pr citrate gel and (b) Pr citrate gel coated ZnO heated in air at heating rate of 10 °C/min.
Figure 2. TG/DTG curves of (a) pure Pr citrate gel and (b) Pr citrate gel coated ZnO heated in air at heating rate of 10 °C/min.
Ijms 13 05278f2
Figure 3. XRD patterns of (a) Pr citrate gel coated-ZnO before calcination and (b) Pr citrate gel coated-ZnO after calcination at 500 °C for 4 h.
Figure 3. XRD patterns of (a) Pr citrate gel coated-ZnO before calcination and (b) Pr citrate gel coated-ZnO after calcination at 500 °C for 4 h.
Ijms 13 05278f3
Figure 4. FESEM micrographs of precursor powder containing calcined ZnO and Pr dopant at (a) 50,000 and (b) 100,000 times magnification.
Figure 4. FESEM micrographs of precursor powder containing calcined ZnO and Pr dopant at (a) 50,000 and (b) 100,000 times magnification.
Ijms 13 05278f4
Figure 5. XRD patterns of sintered ZnO varistor ceramics with Pr6O11 content.
Figure 5. XRD patterns of sintered ZnO varistor ceramics with Pr6O11 content.
Ijms 13 05278f5
Figure 6. FESEM micrograph of the polished surface for sintered ceramic containing 0.8 mol % Pr6O11 and its corresponding EDAX line scan across two adjacent grains.
Figure 6. FESEM micrograph of the polished surface for sintered ceramic containing 0.8 mol % Pr6O11 and its corresponding EDAX line scan across two adjacent grains.
Ijms 13 05278f6
Table 1. Microstructure and I-V characteristic parameters for Pr6O11 based ZnO varistor prepared from citrate gel coating technique.
Table 1. Microstructure and I-V characteristic parameters for Pr6O11 based ZnO varistor prepared from citrate gel coating technique.
Pr6O11 (mol %)ρrel (%)d (μm)α1α2Eb (V/mm)Vgb (V)JL (μA/cm2)ϕB (eV)
0.298.85.23.13.313.30.066950.64
0.495.05.02.43.54.90.037660.60
0.898.64.51.83.02.80.016980.56

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Wan Abdullah, W.R.; Zakaria, A.; Ghazali, M.S.M. Synthesis Mechanism of Low-Voltage Praseodymium Oxide Doped Zinc Oxide Varistor Ceramics Prepared Through Modified Citrate Gel Coating. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2012, 13, 5278-5289. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijms13045278

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Wan Abdullah WR, Zakaria A, Ghazali MSM. Synthesis Mechanism of Low-Voltage Praseodymium Oxide Doped Zinc Oxide Varistor Ceramics Prepared Through Modified Citrate Gel Coating. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2012; 13(4):5278-5289. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijms13045278

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Wan Abdullah, Wan Rafizah, Azmi Zakaria, and Mohd Sabri Mohd Ghazali. 2012. "Synthesis Mechanism of Low-Voltage Praseodymium Oxide Doped Zinc Oxide Varistor Ceramics Prepared Through Modified Citrate Gel Coating" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 13, no. 4: 5278-5289. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ijms13045278

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