Quantifying Li-content for compositional tailoring of lithium ferrite ceramics
C. Granados-Miralles, A. Serrano, P. Prieto, J. Guzm\'an-M\'inguez,, J.E. Prieto, A.M. Friedel, E. Garc\'ia-Mart\'in, J.F. Fern\'andez, A. Quesada

TL;DR
This study accurately quantifies lithium content in lithium ferrite ceramics using multiple methods, confirming the preservation of Li:Fe ratios during synthesis and sintering, which is crucial for tailoring their properties for technological applications.
Contribution
It introduces a reliable approach to quantify lithium in ferrite ceramics and demonstrates the preservation of Li:Fe ratios through synthesis and sintering processes.
Findings
Li:Fe ratios are maintained in sintered ceramics
Two independent methods agree on Li-content measurements
Significant grain growth occurs during sintering
Abstract
Owing to their multiple applications, lithium ferrites are relevant materials for several emerging technologies. For instance, LiFeO2 has been spotted as an alternative cathode material in Li-ion batteries, while LiFe5O8 is the lowest damping ferrite, holding promise in the field of spintronics. The Li-content in lithium ferrites has been shown to greatly affect the physical properties, and in turn, the performance of functional devices based on these materials. Despite this, lithium content is rarely accurately quantified, as a result of the low number of electrons in Li hindering its identification by means of routine materials characterization methods. In the present work, magnetic lithium ferrite powders with Li:Fe ratios of 1:1, 1:3 and 1:5 have been synthesized, successfully obtaining phase-pure materials (LiFeO2 and LiFe5O8), as well as a controlled mixture of both phases. The…
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