Maria Batuk
University of Antwerp
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Featured researches published by Maria Batuk.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2015
Fei Zhang; Kim Vanmeensel; Maria Batuk; Joke Hadermann; Masanao Inokoshi; Bart Van Meerbeek; Ignace Naert; Jef Vleugels
Latest trends in dental restorative ceramics involve the development of full-contour 3Y-TZP ceramics which can avoid chipping of veneering porcelains. Among the challenges are the low translucency and the hydrothermal stability of 3Y-TZP ceramics. In this work, different trivalent oxides (Al2O3, Sc2O3, Nd2O3 and La2O3) were selected to dope 3Y-TZP ceramics. Results show that dopant segregation was a key factor to design hydrothermally stable and high-translucent 3Y-TZP ceramics and the cation dopant radius could be used as a controlling parameter. A large trivalent dopant, oversized as compared to Zr(4+), exhibiting strong segregation at the ZrO2 grain boundary was preferred. The introduction of 0.2 mol% La2O3 in conventional 0.1-0.25 wt.% Al2O3-doped 3Y-TZP resulted in an excellent combination of high translucency and superior hydrothermal stability, while retaining excellent mechanical properties.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2010
Artem M. Abakumov; J. Hadermann; Maria Batuk; H. D'Hondt; Oleg A. Tyablikov; Marina G. Rozova; Konstantin V. Pokholok; Dmitry S. Filimonov; D. V. Sheptyakov; Alexander A. Tsirlin; D. Niermann; J. Hemberger; G. Van Tendeloo; E.V. Antipov
A new A(n)B(n)O(3n-2) homologous series of anion-deficient perovskites has been evidenced by preparation of the members with n = 5 (Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13)) and n = 6 (Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16)) in a single phase form. The crystal structures of these compounds were determined using a combination of transmission electron microscopy and X-ray and neutron powder diffraction (S.G. Ammm, a = 5.74313(7), b = 3.98402(4), c = 26.8378(4) Å, R(I) = 0.035, R(P) = 0.042 for Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13) and S.G. Imma, a = 5.7199(1), b = 3.97066(7), c = 32.5245(8) Å, R(I) = 0.032, R(P) = 0.037 for Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16)). The crystal structures of the A(n)B(n)O(3n-2) homologues are formed by slicing the perovskite structure with (101)(p) crystallographic shear (CS) planes. The shear planes remove a layer of oxygen atoms and displace the perovskite blocks with respect to each other by the 1/2[110](p) vector. The CS planes introduce edge-sharing connections of the transition metal-oxygen polyhedra at the interface between the perovskite blocks. This results in intrinsically frustrated magnetic couplings between the perovskite blocks due to a competition of the exchange interactions between the edge- and the corner-sharing metal-oxygen polyhedra. Despite the magnetic frustration, neutron powder diffraction and Mössbauer spectroscopy reveal that Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13) and Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16) are antiferromagnetically ordered below T(N) = 407 and 343 K, respectively. The Pb(2.9)Ba(2.1)Fe(4)TiO(13) and Pb(3.8)Bi(0.2)Ba(2)Fe(4.2)Ti(1.8)O(16) compounds are in a paraelectric state in the 5-300 K temperature range.
Dental Materials | 2016
Fei Zhang; Masanao Inokoshi; Maria Batuk; Joke Hadermann; Ignace Naert; Bart Van Meerbeek; Jef Vleugels
OBJECTIVE The aim was to evaluate the optical properties, mechanical properties and aging stability of yttria-stabilized zirconia with different compositions, highlighting the influence of the alumina addition, Y2O3 content and La2O3 doping on the translucency. METHODS Five different Y-TZP zirconia powders (3 commercially available and 2 experimentally modified) were sintered under the same conditions and characterized by X-ray diffraction with Rietveld analysis and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Translucency (n=6/group) was measured with a color meter, allowing to calculate the translucency parameter (TP) and the contrast ratio (CR). Mechanical properties were appraised with four-point bending strength (n=10), single edge V-notched beam (SEVNB) fracture toughness (n=8) and Vickers hardness (n=10). The aging stability was evaluated by measuring the tetragonal to monoclinic transformation (n=3) after accelerated hydrothermal aging in steam at 134°C, and the transformation curves were fitted by the Mehl-Avrami-Johnson (MAJ) equation. Data were analyzed by one-way ANOVA, followed by Tukeys HSD test (α=0.05). RESULTS Lowering the alumina content below 0.25wt.% avoided the formation of alumina particles and therefore increased the translucency of 3Y-TZP ceramics, but the hydrothermal aging stability was reduced. A higher yttria content (5mol%) introduced about 50% cubic zirconia phase and gave rise to the most translucent and aging-resistant Y-TZP ceramics, but the fracture toughness and strength were considerably sacrificed. 0.2mol% La2O3 doping of 3Y-TZP tailored the grain boundary chemistry and significantly improved the aging resistance and translucency. Although the translucency improvement by La2O3 doping was less effective than for introducing a substantial amount of cubic zirconia, this strategy was able to maintain the mechanical properties of typical 3Y-TZP ceramics. SIGNIFICANCE Three different approaches were compared to improve the translucency of 3Y-TZP ceramics.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Marie Buffière; Guy Brammertz; Sylvester Sahayaraj; Maria Batuk; Samira Khelifi; Denis Mangin; Abdel-Aziz El Mel; L. Arzel; Joke Hadermann; Marc Meuris; Jef Poortmans
The removal of secondary phases from the surface of the kesterite crystals is one of the major challenges to improve the performances of Cu2ZnSn(S,Se)4 (CZTSSe) thin film solar cells. In this contribution, the KCN/KOH chemical etching approach, originally developed for the removal of CuxSe phases in Cu(In,Ga)(S,Se)2 thin films, is applied to CZTSe absorbers exhibiting various chemical compositions. Two distinct electrical behaviors were observed on CZTSe/CdS solar cells after treatment: (i) the improvement of the fill factor (FF) after 30 s of etching for the CZTSe absorbers showing initially a distortion of the electrical characteristic; (ii) the progressive degradation of the FF after long treatment time for all Cu-poor CZTSe solar cell samples. The first effect can be attributed to the action of KCN on the absorber, that is found to clean the absorber free surface from most of the secondary phases surrounding the kesterite grains (e.g., Se0, CuxSe, SnSex, SnO2, Cu2SnSe3 phases, excepting the ZnSe-based phases). The second observation was identified as a consequence of the preferential etching of Se, Sn, and Zn from the CZTSe surface by the KOH solution, combined with the modification of the alkali content of the absorber. The formation of a Cu-rich shell at the absorber/buffer layer interface, leading to the increase of the recombination rate at the interface, and the increase in the doping of the absorber layer after etching are found to be at the origin of the deterioration of the FF of the solar cells.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Robert G. Palgrave; Pavel Borisov; Matthew S. Dyer; Sean R. C. McMitchell; George R. Darling; John B. Claridge; Maria Batuk; Haiyan Tan; He Tian; Jo Verbeeck; Joke Hadermann; Matthew J. Rosseinsky
Pulsed laser deposition has been used to artificially construct the n = 3 Ruddlesden–Popper structure La2Sr2Mn3O10 in epitaxial thin film form by sequentially layering La1–xSrxMnO3 and SrO unit cells aided by in situ reflection high energy electron diffraction monitoring. The interval deposition technique was used to promote two-dimensional SrO growth. X-ray diffraction and cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy indicated that the trilayer structure had been formed. A site ordering was found to differ from that expected thermodynamically, with the smaller Sr2+ predominantly on the R site due to kinetic trapping of the deposited cation sequence. A dependence of the out-of-plane lattice parameter on growth pressure was interpreted as changing the oxygen content of the films. Magnetic and transport measurements on fully oxygenated films indicated a frustrated magnetic ground state characterized as a spin glass-like magnetic phase with the glass temperature Tg ≈ 34 K. The magnetic frustration has a clear in-plane (ab) magnetic anisotropy, which is maintained up to temperatures of 150 K. Density functional theory calculations suggest competing antiferromagnetic and ferromagnetic long-range orders, which are proposed as the origin of the low-temperature glassy state.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Marie Buffière; Guy Brammertz; Maria Batuk; Christophe Verbist; Denis Mangin; Christine Köble; Joke Hadermann; Marc Meuris; Jef Poortmans
This work presents a detailed analysis of the microstructure and the composition of our record Cu2ZnSnSe4 (CZTSe)-CdS-ZnO solar cell with a total area efficiency of 9.7%. The average composition of the CZTSe crystallites is Cu1.94Zn1.12Sn0.95Se3.99. Large crystals of ZnSe secondary phase (up to 400 nm diameter) are observed at the voids between the absorber and the back contact, while smaller ZnSe domains are segregated at the grain boundaries and close to the surface of the CZTSe grains. An underlying layer and some particles of CuxSe are observed at the Mo-MoSe2-Cu2ZnSnSe4 interface. The free surface of the voids at the back interface is covered by an amorphous layer containing Cu, S, O, and C, while the presence of Cd, Na, and K is also observed in this region.
Acta Crystallographica Section B Structural Crystallography and Crystal Chemistry | 2015
Dmitry Batuk; Maria Batuk; Artem M. Abakumov; Joke Hadermann
The crystal structure solution of modulated compounds is often very challenging, even using the well established methodology of single-crystal X-ray crystallography. This task becomes even more difficult for materials that cannot be prepared in a single-crystal form, so that only polycrystalline powders are available. This paper illustrates that the combined application of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and powder diffraction is a possible solution to the problem. Using examples of anion-deficient perovskites modulated by periodic crystallographic shear planes, it is demonstrated what kind of local structural information can be obtained using various TEM techniques and how this information can be implemented in the crystal structure refinement against the powder diffraction data. The following TEM methods are discussed: electron diffraction (selected area electron diffraction, precession electron diffraction), imaging (conventional high-resolution TEM imaging, high-angle annular dark-field and annular bright-field scanning transmission electron microscopy) and state-of-the-art spectroscopic techniques (atomic resolution mapping using energy-dispersive X-ray analysis and electron energy loss spectroscopy).
Inorganic Chemistry | 2017
Bensu Tunca; Thomas Lapauw; Olesia M. Karakulina; Maria Batuk; Thierry Cabioc’h; Joke Hadermann; Rémi Delville; Konstantina Lambrinou; J. Vleugels
This study reports on the synthesis and characterization of MAX phases in the (Zr,Ti)n+1AlCn system. The MAX phases were synthesized by reactive hot pressing and pressureless sintering in the 1350-1700 °C temperature range. The produced ceramics contained large fractions of 211 and 312 (n = 1, 2) MAX phases, while strong evidence of a 413 (n = 3) stacking was found. Moreover, (Zr,Ti)C, ZrAl2, ZrAl3, and Zr2Al3 were present as secondary phases. In general, the lattice parameters of the hexagonal 211 and 312 phases followed Vegards law over the complete Zr-Ti solid solution range, but the 312 phase showed a non-negligible deviation from Vegards law around the (Zr0.33,Ti0.67)3Al1.2C1.6 stoichiometry. High-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy combined with X-ray diffraction demonstrated ordering of the Zr and Ti atoms in the 312 phase, whereby Zr atoms occupied preferentially the central position in the close-packed M6X octahedral layers. The same ordering was also observed in 413 stackings present within the 312 phase. The decomposition of the secondary (Zr,Ti)C phase was attributed to the miscibility gap in the ZrC-TiC system.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Dmitry Batuk; Maria Batuk; Artem M. Abakumov; Alexander A. Tsirlin; C. McCammon; Leonid Dubrovinsky; J. Hadermann
Factors affecting the structure and orientation of the crystallographic shear (CS) planes in anion-deficient perovskites were investigated using the (Pb(1-z)Sr(z))(1-x)Fe(1+x)O(3-y) perovskites as a model system. The isovalent substitution of Sr(2+) for Pb(2+) highlights the influence of the A cation electronic structure because these cations exhibit very close ionic radii. Two compositional ranges have been identified in the system: 0.05 ≤ z ≤ 0.2, where the CS plane orientation gradually varies but stays close to (203)p, and 0.3 ≤ z ≤ 0.45 with (101)p CS planes. The incommensurately modulated structure of Pb0.792Sr0.168Fe1.040O2.529 was refined from neutron powder diffraction data using the (3 + 1)D approach (space group X2/m(α0γ), X = (1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1/2), a = 3.9512(1) Å, b = 3.9483(1) Å, c = 3.9165(1) Å, β = 93.268(2)°, q = 0.0879(1)a* + 0.1276(1)c*, RF = 0.023, RP = 0.029, and T = 900 K). A comparison of the compounds with different CS planes indicates that the orientation of the CS planes is governed mainly by the stereochemical activity of the lone-electron-pair cations inside the perovskite blocks.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Artem M. Abakumov; Maria Batuk; Alexander A. Tsirlin; Oleg A. Tyablikov; D. V. Sheptyakov; Dmitry S. Filimonov; Konstantin V. Pokholok; V. S. Zhidal; Marina G. Rozova; Evgeny V. Antipov; J. Hadermann; G. Van Tendeloo
Novel anion-deficient perovskite-based ferrites Pb2Ba2BiFe5O13 and Pb(1.5)Ba(2.5)Bi2Fe6O16 were synthesized by solid-state reaction in air. Pb2Ba2BiFe5O13 and Pb(1.5)Ba(2.5)Bi2Fe6O16 belong to the perovskite-based A(n)B(n)O(3n-2) homologous series with n = 5 and 6, respectively, with a unit cell related to the perovskite subcell a(p) as a(p)√2 × a(p) × na(p)√2. Their structures are derived from the perovskite one by slicing it with 1/2[110]p(101)p crystallographic shear (CS) planes. The CS operation results in (101)p-shaped perovskite blocks with a thickness of (n - 2) FeO6 octahedra connected to each other through double chains of edge-sharing FeO5 distorted tetragonal pyramids which can adopt two distinct mirror-related configurations. Ordering of chains with a different configuration provides an extra level of structure complexity. Above T ≈ 750 K for Pb2Ba2BiFe5O13 and T ≈ 400 K for Pb(1.5)Ba(2.5)Bi2Fe6O16 the chains have a disordered arrangement. On cooling, a second-order structural phase transition to the ordered state occurs in both compounds. Symmetry changes upon phase transition are analyzed using a combination of superspace crystallography and group theory approach. Correlations between the chain ordering pattern and octahedral tilting in the perovskite blocks are discussed. Pb2Ba2BiFe5O13 and Pb(1.5)Ba(2.5)Bi2Fe6O16 undergo a transition into an antiferromagnetically (AFM) ordered state, which is characterized by a G-type AFM ordering of the Fe magnetic moments within the perovskite blocks. The AFM perovskite blocks are stacked along the CS planes producing alternating FM and AFM-aligned Fe-Fe pairs. In spite of the apparent frustration of the magnetic coupling between the perovskite blocks, all n = 4, 5, 6 A(n)Fe(n)O(3n-2) (A = Pb, Bi, Ba) feature robust antiferromagnetism with similar Néel temperatures of 623-632 K.