| Literature DB >> 26587718 |
Takeshi Yajima1,2, Fumitaka Takeiri1, Kohei Aidzu1, Hirofumi Akamatsu3, Koji Fujita4, Wataru Yoshimune1, Masatoshi Ohkura1, Shiming Lei3, Venkatraman Gopalan3, Katsuhisa Tanaka4, Craig M Brown5, Mark A Green6, Takafumi Yamamoto1, Yoji Kobayashi1, Hiroshi Kageyama1,7.
Abstract
Oxynitrides have been explored extensively in the past decade because of their interesting properties, such as visible-light absorption, photocatalytic activity and high dielectric permittivity. Their synthesis typically requires high-temperature NH3 treatment (800-1,300 °C) of precursors, such as oxides, but the highly reducing conditions and the low mobility of N(3-) species in the lattice place significant constraints on the composition and structure-and hence the properties-of the resulting oxynitrides. Here we show a topochemical route that enables the preparation of an oxynitride at low temperatures (<500 °C), using a perovskite oxyhydride as a host. The lability of H(-) in BaTiO3-xHx (x ≤ 0.6) allows H(-)/N(3-) exchange to occur, and yields a room-temperature ferroelectric BaTiO3-xN2x/3. This anion exchange is accompanied by a metal-to-insulator crossover via mixed O-H-N intermediates. These findings suggest that this 'labile hydride' strategy can be used to explore various oxynitrides, and perhaps other mixed anionic compounds.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26587718 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427