1957
DOI: 10.1063/1.1743590
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Electrical Conductivity Measurements on Cuprous Halides

Abstract: The total electrical conductivity and the electron hole conductivity in solid CuCl, CuBr, and CuI between 250 and 450°C have been determined with help of ac measurements on samples between copper electrodes and dc polarization measurements on the cell Cu|cuprous halide|graphite.

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Cited by 587 publications
(226 citation statements)
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“…This peculiar behaviour of observing both types of conductivity for the same sample may reflect an electrical instability in the Zn-doped CuCl samples. This may result from two competing conductivity mechanisms, namely electron conduction from the substitution of Cu by Zn and hole conduction due to the presence of Cu vacancies which are known to be present in undoped material [7] and may also be introduced due to excess chlorine from co-evaporation with ZnCl 2 . [8].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This peculiar behaviour of observing both types of conductivity for the same sample may reflect an electrical instability in the Zn-doped CuCl samples. This may result from two competing conductivity mechanisms, namely electron conduction from the substitution of Cu by Zn and hole conduction due to the presence of Cu vacancies which are known to be present in undoped material [7] and may also be introduced due to excess chlorine from co-evaporation with ZnCl 2 . [8].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The total electrical conductivity and the electron hole conductivity in copper halides have been reported by Wagner et al many years ago [6]. They reported p-type conductivity for the as deposited copper chloride films due to the presence of copper vacancies caused by the excess halogen.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The transference number of the mobile species in the NPE film has been calculated by Wagner's dc-polarization method. 19 OCC of each electrolyte sample was sandwiched between two brass (blocking) electrode was polarized by applying a constant DC potential (1.5 V) through a potentiostat across the sample for about 3 h and the resulting current was monitored. Figure 6 shows the variation of polarization current as a function of time.…”
Section: 1c Ionic Transference Number Measurementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The activation energy was computed by temperature dependence conductivity curve. Ionic and electronic transference numbers (t ion and t ele ) were evaluated by means of Wagner's DC polarization technique, 18,19 degree of amorphosity by X-ray diffraction technique using a Philips PW 1710 diffractometer (using Cu-Kα radiation), surface morphology of the samples through SEM associated with EDS using JEOL JSM-5800 system. The thermal stability was studied by thermogravimetric analysis using TGA instruments (SDT 2960) and DSC (Perkin Elmer).…”
Section: Physical and Electrochemical Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%