The pursuit of high-temperature resistance, long-term reliability and stability simultaneously for thermosensitive thin film materials is longstanding. However, most precious metal or ceramic thin films face oxidation failure and instability in extremely high-temperature environments, making it difficult to meet the demands of practical applications. Herein, zirconium-yttrium oxide (ZYO) is initially proposed to be used as the thermosensitive thin film material for ultra-high temperature measurement. ZYO thin films with high quality were produced via magnetron sputtering. Furthermore, the recrystallization refinement process during high-temperature annealing fills the voids in the film, resulting in a uniform and dense microstructure. Such configuration underpins the remarkable thermal stability of the ZYO thin film thermistor, which exhibits a resistance drift rate of only 0.67 %/h at 1200 °C and remain the function when exposure at 1550 °C. Following the Steinhart-Hart equation, it also achieves real-time temperature sensing across 800 ℃ to 1500 ℃ with excellent repeatability. Notably, through the cyclic thermal shocks of 200 ℃/s heating to 1500 ℃, the thin film thermistor illustrates the stable microstructure and electrical properties. This attractive material with excellent thermosensitive performance has tremendous application potential in extreme environments. • Zirconium-yttrium oxide is used as a novel thermosensitive thin film material. • Recrystallization resulted in a dense and uniform microstructure of the film. • Demonstrated remarkable thermal stability through thermal shock and drift tests. • Temperature sensing across 800 ℃ to 1500 ℃ with excellent repeatability.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Mingyang Kong
Haigang WANG
Haojie Xu
Journal of Alloys and Compounds
Xiamen University
Dalian University of Technology
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Kong et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75efbc6e9836116a2a07d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jallcom.2026.186494
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: