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Kinetics of solid-gas reactions characterized by scanning AC nano-calorimetry with application to Zr oxidation

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2014

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AIP Publishing
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Xiao, Kechao, Dongwoo Lee, and Joost J. Vlassak. 2014. “Kinetics of Solid-Gas Reactions Characterized by Scanning AC Nano-Calorimetry with Application to Zr Oxidation.” Applied Physics Letters 105 (17) (October 27): 171901. Portico. doi:10.1063/1.4900779.

Abstract

Scanning AC nano-calorimetry is a recently developed experimental technique capable of measuring the heat capacity of thin-film samples of a material over a wide range of temperatures and heating rates. Here, we describe how this technique can be used to study solid-gas phase reactions by measuring the change in heat capacity of a sample during reaction. We apply this approach to evaluate the oxidation kinetics of thin-film samples of zirconium in air. The results confirm parabolic oxidation kinetics with an activation energy of 0.59 ± 0.03 eV. The nano-calorimetry measurements were performed using a device that contains an array of micromachined nano-calorimeter sensors in an architecture designed for combinatorial studies. We demonstrate that the oxidation kinetics can be quantified using a single sample, thus enabling high-throughput mapping of the composition-dependence of the reaction rate.

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Oxidation, Heat capacity, Differential scanning calorimeters, X-ray diffraction, Sputter deposition

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