| Literature DB >> 31680355 |
Ran Gao1,2, Abhinav C P Jain3,4, Shishir Pandya1,2, Yongqi Dong5,6, Yakun Yuan7, Hua Zhou5,6, Liv R Dedon1,2, Vincent Thoréton8, Sahar Saremi1,2, Ruijuan Xu1,2, Aileen Luo1,2, Ting Chen9, Venkatraman Gopalan7, Elif Ertekin10, John Kilner11, Tatsumi Ishihara8, Nicola H Perry8, Dallas R Trinkle3,4, Lane W Martin1,2.
Abstract
Solid-oxide fuel/electrolyzer cells are limited by a dearth of electrolyte materials with low ohmic loss and an incomplete understanding of the structure-property relationships that would enable the rational design of better materials. Here, using epitaxial thin-film growth, synchrotron radiation, impedance spectroscopy, and density-functional theory, the impact of structural parameters (i.e., unit-cell volume and octahedral rotations) on ionic conductivity is delineated in La0.9 Sr0.1 Ga0.95 Mg0.05 O3- δ . As compared to the zero-strain state, compressive strain reduces the unit-cell volume while maintaining large octahedral rotations, resulting in a strong reduction of ionic conductivity, while tensile strain increases the unit-cell volume while quenching octahedral rotations, resulting in a negligible effect on the ionic conductivity. Calculations reveal that larger unit-cell volumes and octahedral rotations decrease migration barriers and create low-energy migration pathways, respectively. The desired combination of large unit-cell volume and octahedral rotations is normally contraindicated, but through the creation of superlattice structures both expanded unit-cell volume and large octahedral rotations are experimentally realized, which result in an enhancement of the ionic conductivity. All told, the potential to tune ionic conductivity with structure alone by a factor of ≈2.5 at around 600 °C is observed, which sheds new light on the rational design of ion-conducting perovskite electrolytes.Entities:
Keywords: crystal symmetry; energy conversion; ionic conduction; octahedral rotation; perovskite oxides; strain
Year: 2019 PMID: 31680355 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201905178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849