Institutional Repository
Technical University of Crete
EN  |  EL

Search

Browse

My Space

Complex electrical conductivity of biotite and muscovite micas at elevated temperatures: a comparative study

Saltas Vassilios, Pentari Despoina, Vallianatos, Filippos

Full record


URI: http://purl.tuc.gr/dl/dias/B08CA33F-18A6-4213-A367-2513391594A6
Year 2020
Type of Item Peer-Reviewed Journal Publication
License
Details
Bibliographic Citation V. Saltas, D. Pentari, and F. Vallianatos, “Complex electrical conductivity of biotite and muscovite micas at elevated temperatures: a comparative study,” Materials, vol. 13, no. 16, Aug. 2020. doi: 10.3390/ma13163513 https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13163513
Appears in Collections

Summary

The unique physicochemical, electrical, mechanical, and thermal properties of micas make them suitable for a wide range of industrial applications, and thus, the interest for these kind of hydrous aluminosilicate minerals is still persistent, not only from a practical but also from a scientific point of view. In the present work, complex impedance spectroscopy measurements were carried out in muscovite and biotite micas, perpendicular to their cleavage planes, over a broad range of frequencies (10−2 Hz to 106 Hz) and temperatures (473–1173 K) that have not been measured so far. Different formalisms of data representation were used, namely, Cole-Cole plots of complex impedance, complex electrical conductivity and electric modulus to analyze the electrical behavior of micas and the electrical signatures of the dehydration/dehydroxylation processes. Our results suggest that ac-conductivity is affected by the structural hydroxyls and the different concentrations of transition metals (Fe, Ti and Mg) in biotite and muscovite micas. The estimated activation energies, i.e., 0.33–0.83 eV for biotite and 0.69–1.92 eV for muscovite, were attributed to proton and small polaron conduction, due to the bound water and different oxidation states of Fe.

Available Files

Services

Statistics