Direct current conduction in ammonium and potassium dihydrogen phosphate
- 15 May 1973
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 58 (10) , 4550-4557
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1679018
Abstract
Experiment, plus critical discussion of previous work, suggests the following. Conductivity is primarily due to the migration of L defects (proton vacancies), the enthalpy for L‐defect mobility being 0.53 eV in KDP and 0.46 eV in ADP. Such L defects are produced by impurities, but there is an additional tendency towards incipient decomposition in both crystals. This leads to a high‐temperature conductivity which, in KDP, is associated with the formation of water molecules and the thermal generation of L defects and, in ADP, with the formation of ammonia molecules and the thermal generation of proton vacancies in the ammonium lattice (A defects). The enthalpy of L‐defect formation in KDP is 0.46 eV; that for A‐defect formation in ADP is 0.19 eV. Previously reported overheating effects are spurious. The conductivity is independent of field.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conduction and Diffusion in Crystals Containing Hydrogen Bonds. II. Ammonium Dihydrogen PhosphateThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1969
- Conductivity of ice by a guarded potential probe methodSolid State Communications, 1968
- Bulk conductivity of ice between -25 and -100°C with ion exchange membranesSolid State Communications, 1967
- Self-Diffusion of Tritium in Natural and Synthetic Ice MonocrystalsJournal of Applied Physics, 1967
- Bulk and surface conductivity of iceSolid State Communications, 1966
- Simple coulometer for studying protonic conduction in crystalsJournal of Scientific Instruments, 1965
- Conduction in Single Crystals of Ammonium Dihydrogen PhosphateJournal of Applied Physics, 1964
- Conductivity measurements on pure iceTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1963
- Gitterfehlordnung und physikalische Eigenschaften hexagonaler und kubischer EiskristalleZeitschrift für Kristallographie, 1958
- Alternating Current Conduction in IcePhysical Review B, 1950