1. Introduction
In the past several decades, great attention has been paid to microwave dielectric ceramics due to their wide applications in mobile and satellite telecommunication systems. Generally, to meet the demands, suitable permittivity (ε), low dielectric loss, and near-zero temperature coefficients of resonate frequencies (τ
f) are required for these microwave dielectric ceramics [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6] For application in base stations or satellite telecommunications, high Qf values, middle permittivity (25 < e < 50), and near zero t
f (−10 ppm/°C < t
f < 10 ppm/°C) are usually required in microwave dielectric ceramics [
3]. A series of compounds with middle permittivity, such as BaTi
4O
9, Ba
2Ti
9O
20, (Zr,Sn)TiO
4, Ba(Zn
1/3Nb
2/3)O
3, CaTiO
3–NdAlO
3, and CaLa
4Ti
4O
15 have been developed for practical applications [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7]. Recently, some novel dielectric ceramics with middle permittivity have been explored [
8,
9,
10,
11]. Among these dielectric ceramics with middle permittivity, TiO
2-rich compounds of BaTi
4O
9 exhibit excellent microwave dielectric properties such as a middle permittivity of 37–39, a high Qf of 21,000–37,000 GHz, and near-zero temperature coefficients of 15 ppm/°C [
6,
7].
Recently, low temperature co-fired technologies have been developed to meet the demand of the miniaturization of microwave devices. Thus, the sintering temperatures of microwave dielectric ceramics need to match with the internal electrodes of Ag and Ag-Pd with a low melting point, which are required low temperature co-fired ceramics (LTCC). BaTi
4O
9 exhibits excellent microwave dielectric properties such as a middle permittivity of 37–39, a high Qf of 21,000–37,000 GHz, and near-zero temperature coefficients of 15 ppm/°C. However, its sintering temperature is as high as 1350 °C, which is too high for application in the field of LTCC. In addition, lowering the sintering temperature is helpful for energy saving. Therefore, it is interesting to lower the sintering temperature of BaTi
4O
9 microwave dielectric ceramics. For application in the field of LTCC, considering energy savings, two methods are, usually, adopted to reduce the sintering temperatures of dielectric ceramics with high sintering temperatures. One is to prepare the ceramics derived from nano-powder. The other is the introduction of glass or oxides with low melting temperatures to liquid phase sintering. The latter method has often been adopted to lower the sintering temperature of microwave dielectric ceramics [
12,
13,
14,
15,
16]. In addition, some advanced sintering methods such as cold sintering [
17] and microwave sintering [
18] have been adopted to prepare functional ceramics at low temperatures. Considering the economic, energy saving, and production efficiencies, liquid phase sintering is the most well-known approach for the low temperature sintering of microwave dielectric ceramics.
Some studies have reported on the low temperature sintering of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics. BaO–ZnO–B
2O
3, La
2O
3–B
2O
3–CaO, B–La–Mg–Ti–O, and B
2O
3–ZnO–La
2O
3 glass and BaCuB
2O
5 and BaB
2O
4 compounds have been adopted as sintering aids to reduce the sintering temperatures of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics [
14,
15,
16,
19,
20,
21]. As shown in
Table 1, sintering temperatures can be significantly lowered from 1350 °C to about 900 °C. For example, after the introduction of 27.5 wt% BaO–ZnO–B
2O
3 glass
, the sintering temperature of BaTi
4O
9–based ceramics is considerably decreased to 925 °C, and excellent microwave dielectric properties such as ε = 26.4, Q × f = 27,300 GHz, and τ
f = 3.3 ppm/°C are achieved [
15]. Some examples of glass such as La
2O
3–B
2O
3–CaO and B–La–Mg–Ti–O are even added in at concentrations as high as 50–70 wt% [
19,
21]. As stated above, although these glasses or compounds can effectively reduce the sintering temperature of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics, high-content aids, for example, 20%, have often been added in order to reduce the sintering temperature. The consequent results are the deterioration of the microwave dielectric properties. One is the degradation of the Qf value, the other is that the temperature coefficient is not zero. Therefore, it is important and urgent to prepare high Qf values and near-zero temperature coefficient BaTi
4O
9 microwave dielectric ceramics with a small amount of sintering aid.
CuO is a common sintering aid for dielectric ceramics [
22]. However, CuO, sometimes, does not reduce the sintering temperature enough to meet well the demands of the LTCC. Thus, CuO-based binary sintering aids are investigated. In previous studies, e.g., [
23,
24,
25], once TiO
2 was introduced to CuO, the liquid phase temperature reduced to the eutectic temperature of the CuO–TiO
2 binary system. After the investigation of details via differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermogravimetric (TG) analysis, in conjunction with hot-stage microscopy, the eutectic temperature and composition of the CuO–TiO
2 system was certified as 1010 ± 10 °C and 83 CuO:17 TiO
2, respectively [
23]. However, a computed eutectic temperature of 919 °C and a composition of 16.7 mol% TiO
2 at p
O2 = 1 atm have been reported by Lu et al. [
24] for the CuO–TiO
2 system, which is shown in
Figure 1. Although there is little variation in eutectic temperature and composition in these investigations, the eutectic temperature was low enough to act as a sintering aid. Thus, CuO–TiO
2 may be a prospect sintering aid for microwave dielectric ceramics. In the present work, the eutectic composition of CuO–TiO
2 has been chosen as a sintering aid to lower the sintering temperature of BaTi
4O
9 microwave dielectric ceramics. The sintering behaviors, microstructures, and microwave dielectric properties of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics have been investigated in detail. Additionally, the sintering mechanisms and variations of microwave dielectric properties have been also discussed with the crystal phase and microstructure’s evolution.
2. Materials and Methods
CuO–TiO2 (CT) additions were prepared according to 83.3 mol% CuO-16.7 mol%TiO2, using CuO (99.0%) and TiO2 (99.0%) reagent powder. The weighted powder was ground for 12 h by ball milling in distilled water. Afterwards, the mixtures were dried to become a sintering additive. BaTi4O9 powder was synthesized by conventional solid-state reaction methods at a high temperature. According to the formula of BaTi4O9, raw materials of BaCO3 (99.8%) and TiO2 (99.0%) were weighed and ground in a polyethylene jar for 12 h by ball milling in distilled water. The ground powder was dried at 90 °C for 24 h and then calcined at 1200 °C for 2 h in air to obtain the single phase of the BaTi4O9. The calcined BaTi4O9 powder with a 0–10 wt% CT addition was reground for 8 h using distilled water. After drying, 5% PVA solution was added as a binder for granulation to the mixed powder. The granulated powder was pressed into pellets with a 13 mm diameter and a 2–6 mm thickness at a pressure of 100 MPa. To remove the PVA binder, the pellets were heated to 600 °C with a heating rate of 5 °C/min and a dwelling time of 2 h. After burning out the binder, the pellets were sintered in air by traditional liquid sintering at the temperature range of 1000–1125 °C with a dwelling time of 3 h to obtain the dense BaTi4O9-based ceramics. The heating rate was 5°C/min and cooled with the furnace after dwelling.
Thermogravimetry and differential thermal analysis (TG–DSC) were carried out by a synchronous thermal analyzer (STA 449C, NETZSCH, Germany), with a heating rate of 10 °C/min in an N
2 atmosphere from room temperature to 1150 °C. The bulk densities of the sintered samples were determined by the Archimedes method. The shrinkage (h) of the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics was calculated from the diameter difference before and after sintering. The equation was h = (r
0 − r
1)/m
0 × 100%, where r
0 and r
1 were the diameters before and after sintering, respectively. The mass loss (d) of the pellets was evaluated by the mass difference before and after sintering, i.e., d = (m
0 − m
1)/m
0 × 100%, where m
0 and m
1 were the masses before and after sintering, respectively. The crystalline phases of the dense BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics were identified by powder X-ray diffraction (XRD, XD−5A, CuK
α, λ = 1.5406 × 10
−10 m, Shimadzu, Japan). The polished and thermally etched surfaces of the sintered samples were observed by environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM, XL30 ESEM–TMP, Philips, Netherlands). Microwave dielectric properties of sintered samples were measured by the TE
01δ mode [
26], using a vector network analyzer (R3767BH, Advantest, Japan). Additionally, the temperature coefficient of the resonant frequency τ
f was calculated from the temperature coefficient of the dielectric constant τ
ε, according to the equation of τ
f = −1/2τ
ε − α, where α was the linear expansion coefficient (~6–10 ppm/°C). τ
ε was measured in the temperature range of 25 to 85 °C using a precise LCR meter (Agilent 4284A, Agilent, Malaysia) at 1 MHz.
3. Results
Figure 2 shows the DSC and TG curves of BaTi
4O
9 powder with 0.5% and 5% CT additions as the function of temperature. As shown in
Figure 1, an evident mass loss around 900 °C can be observed for BaTi
4O
9 powder with 0.5% CT, and a corresponding sharp endothermal peak appears in the DSC curve. This endothermal peak can be ascribed to the formation of the CuO–TiO
2 liquid phase, which is in agreement with the eutectic temperature of the CuO–TiO
2 binary reported by Lu et al. [
24]. This is about 100 °C lower than the other reported values of eutectic temperatures in CuO–TiO
2 systems [
23,
25]. Although the CT addition is only 0.5%, the mass loss is as high as about 0.65%, which suggests that some BaTi
4O
9 dissolved into the eutectic liquid phase of the CuO–TiO
2 system. This is helpful for the densification of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics [
27]. However, no evident mass loss is observed for the BaTi
4O
9 powder with a 5.0% CT addition when the temperature is beyond 800 °C. This is, evidently, different from that of the BaTi
4O
9 powder with a 0.5% CT addition. Furthermore, the corresponding endothermal peak becomes weak and wide in the DSC curve. The variation between the two DSC and TG curves for BaTi
4O
9 powder with 0.5% and 5% CT additions suggests that reaction occurs in the powders of the BaTi
4O
9 and CuO–TiO
2 addition, which results in the elevating of the liquid phase temperature. This results in no evident mass loss.
After sintering at different temperatures, the mass loss in
Figure 3 is for the sintered BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with different contents of CT additions. The larger mass loss is observed for the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with the higher CT addition. The mass loss is beyond 2.0% for the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with a 10% CT addition. The mass loss is in the range of 0.55–0.85% for the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with 0.5–5.0% CT addition. Although the dwelling time is 3 h and the sintering temperature is higher than eutectic temperature of CT, it should be noted that the value of mass loss is lower than the corresponding mass loss at a eutectic temperature of around 900 °C in the TG curve for BaTi
4O
9 powder with a 0.5 wt% CT addition. This is due to the N
2 atmosphere flow during the TG–DSC measurement. In addition, a low mass loss of 0.85% is observed for the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with a 5.0% CT addition, which is also consistent with the result of the TG–DSC. For every BaTi
4O
9 ceramic with a different addition of CT content, four pellets are measured to evaluate the mass loss before and after sintering. The discrepancy of mass loss is below 0.025%.
The density (r) and shrinkage (h) of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with various amounts of CT additions are shown in
Figure 4. Without CT addition, pure BaTi
4O
9 ceramics are densely sintered at a high temperature of 1350 °C, which is consistent with previous reports [
14,
15]. After the introduction of a very small amount of CT (0.5%), the dense BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with the density of about 4.4 g/cm
3 can be achieved at 1100 °C, which is evidently lower than the sintering temperature of 1350 °C for pure BaTi
4O
9 ceramics. However, with the increase in the CT addition, despite the density sintering at 1050 °C showing evident enhancements, the sintering temperature for the dense BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics is still around 1100 °C, which has little variation with the CT content. As shown in
Figure 4a, similar trends of shrinkage are observed for the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with a CT addition. Additionally, the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with a CT addition exhibit higher shrinkages, which are beyond 15%.
Figure 5 demonstrates XRD patterns of dense BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with different contents of CT addition. According to the XRD patterns, all the diffraction peaks can be ascribed to the BaTi
4O
9 phase (JCPDS File No. 34-0070) for the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with a small amount of CT addition (below 2.0%). Otherwise, the secondary phases of BaTiO
3 (JCPDS File No. 05-0626), Ba
4Ti
13O
30 (JCPDS File No. 35-0750), and TiO
2 (JCPDS File No. 73-2224) are observed when the CT addition is above 2.0%. It has been reported that even a small deviation in BaTi
4O
9 can result in the formation of many stable TiO
2-rich compounds such as Ba
4Ti
13O
30 and Ba
2Ti
9O
20 in the BaO–TiO
2 system [
28,
29,
30]. With increasing CT additions, the intensities of the Ba
4Ti
13O
30 phase diffraction peaks are evidently enhanced, which indicates that the content of the Ba
4Ti
13O
30 phase gradually increases. When the CT content further increases to 10%, the Ba
4Ti
13O
30 phase becomes the major phase. This phase evolution may be due to the introduction of the CT to BaTi
4O
9. Combining the results of the TG–DSC and mass loss suggests that a partial reaction occurs between CT and BaTi
4O
9 during the sintering. When the temperature is elevated to a eutectic temperature of the CuO–TiO
2 system (around 900 °C), the liquid phase of the CT appears during the sintering. The CT liquid phase has two effects. One promotes the densification of BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics. The other induces the decomposition and partial dissolution of BaTi
4O
9 in the liquid phase because the Ti content of Ba
4Ti
13O
30 is lower than that of BaTi
4O
9. According to the phase evolution, the reaction equation can be depicted as follows,
The decomposition of BaTi4O9 results in more TiO2, which will increase the TiO2 content of the CuO–TiO2 system. Consequently, the composition of the CT addition is away from the eutectic composition, shifts to TiO2, and ends in the CuO–TiO2 system. This results in the temperature corresponding to the liquid phase of CuO–TiO2 system rising and the noncongruent melting occurring, according to the theory of phase diagram. Therefore, a sharp endothermal peak and an evident mass loss are observed in the TG-DSC curves for BaTi4O9 powder with a 0.5% CT. However, no strong endothermal peak or evident mass loss are observed in the BaTi4O9 powder with a 5% CT addition. Thus, the sintering temperature of the BaTi4O9-based ceramics lowers to just around 1100 °C and does not further decrease when the CT addition further increases in the range of 0.5–10.0%. The sintering behaviors are closely related with the phase evolution.
Figure 6 gives SEM images of the dense BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with different amounts of CT additions. The present ceramics exhibit little porosity, which is consistent with the high densities in
Figure 4a. After the introduction of the CT addition, the grains of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics are evidently smaller because the lower sintering temperature suppresses the grain growth. Additionally, some white regular grains in the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with a 1.0% or more CT addition clearly exist, and this content increases with the increase in the CT addition. Thus, this also certifies that partial reaction occurs between the CT and BaTi
4O
9 during the sintering. These grains correspond to the secondary phases of BaTiO
3, Ba
4Ti
13O
30, and TiO
2. Additionally, there are a few grains with abnormal grain growths for the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with a 0.5% and 1.0% CT, as shown in
Figure 5b,c. In addition, as shown in
Figure 5e,f, melting phenomena are clearly observed for the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with a 5.0% and 10.0% CT. This indicates that more liquid phases are formed in the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics during sintering.
From the variations in sintering behaviors and structure evolutions, the sintering mechanisms of BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with CT additions can be concluded as follows. As per the TG–DSC results and the investigation of the CuO–TiO
2 system, the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with CT additions exhibit liquid phase sintering. According to the sintering theory of liquid phase sintering, the extensive densification of ceramics is associated with a low liquid solubility in solid combinations and a high solid solubility in the liquid [
27]. When the temperature is elevated to the eutectic point of CuO–TiO
2, the liquid phase occurs during the sintering. As stated above, the sintering temperature of BaTi
4O
9 can be reduced from 1350 °C to about 1100°C with a very small amount of CT addition, e.g., 0.5%. In conclusion, BaTi
4O
9 has a high solid solubility in the liquid of CuO–TiO
2. XRD patterns demonstrate that the secondary phases of BaTiO
3, Ba
4Ti
13O
30, and TiO
2 are formed during sintering, which means that the decomposition of BaTi
4O
9 results in the formation of BaTiO
3/Ba
4Ti
13O
30 and TiO
2. Once the decomposition occurs, the content of TiO
2 increases. This results in composition shifts to the end of the rich TiO
2 in the CuO–TiO
2 system. Consequently, the liquid temperature rises and noncongruent melting occurs. Therefore, as shown in the TG–DSC curves, no strong endothermal peaks and evident mass losses are observed in the BaTi
4O
9 powder with a 5% CT addition. Thus, sintering temperature has little change with different contents of CT addition. However, more melting phenomena are observed in the SEM images for BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with higher contents of CT addition.
As a function of CT additions, the microwave dielectric properties of BaTi
4O
9 ceramics are shown in
Figure 7. With the increase in CT addition, permittivity keeps around 37.0 in the CT range of 0–1% and then elevates to 41.0 for a 10% CT addition. The permittivity of dielectric ceramics, in general, depends on the density and permittivity of constitution phases. As stated above, all of the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with CT additions have high densities. For the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics with a small amount of CT addition (below 2.0%), only the BaTi
4O
9 phase is observed in the XRD patterns. Otherwise, the secondary phases of BaTiO
3, Ba
4Ti
13O
30, and TiO
2 with high permittivity are formed. Therefore, the variation in permittivity with CT addition is consistent with the phase evolution of BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics. However, there is a rapid decrease in the Qf values of the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics with a small amount of CT addition. When the CT addition is 10.0%, the Qf value rapidly deteriorates to below 10,000 GHz. This is likely because of the large amount of the BaTiO
3 and Ba
4Ti
13O
30 secondary phase with a high dielectric loss [
16,
28,
31]. Compared to permittivity, there is an opposite trend for the temperature coefficient of the resonant frequency τ
f. The value of τ
f is around zero in the CT range of 0–1% and rapidly decreases when the CT addition is beyond 1%.
Table 1 lists the microwave dielectric properties of some BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics sintered at low temperatures. Although previous studies studied sintering temperatures of only about 900 °C, there are two aspects that should be noted. One is that these investigations adopted larger content additions, such as 20%, which are far above that of the present work. The other is that the BaTi
4O
9-based ceramics exhibit low permittivity or high τ
f values. The excellent microwave dielectric properties of ε = 36.9, Q × f = 23,100 GHz, and τ
f = 2.5 ppm/°C are achieved for the BaTi
4O
9 ceramics sintered at 1100 °C with only a 0.5% CT addition.