| Literature DB >> 32424371 |
Matteo Bianchini1,2,3, Jingyang Wang1,2, Raphaële J Clément2,4, Bin Ouyang1,2, Penghao Xiao1,2, Daniil Kitchaev4, Tan Shi1,2, Yaqian Zhang1,2, Yan Wang5, Haegyeom Kim1,2, Mingjian Zhang6, Jianming Bai6, Feng Wang6, Wenhao Sun7,8, Gerbrand Ceder9,10.
Abstract
In the synthesis of inorganic materials, reactions often yield non-equilibrium kinetic byproducts instead of the thermodynamic equilibrium phase. Understanding the competition between thermodynamics and kinetics is a fundamental step towards the rational synthesis of target materials. Here, we use in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction to investigate the multistage crystallization pathways of the important two-layer (P2) sodium oxides Na0.67MO2 (M = Co, Mn). We observe a series of fast non-equilibrium phase transformations through metastable three-layer O3, O3' and P3 phases before formation of the equilibrium two-layer P2 polymorph. We present a theoretical framework to rationalize the observed phase progression, demonstrating that even though P2 is the equilibrium phase, compositionally unconstrained reactions between powder precursors favour the formation of non-equilibrium three-layered intermediates. These insights can guide the choice of precursors and parameters employed in the solid-state synthesis of ceramic materials, and constitutes a step forward in unravelling the complex interplay between thermodynamics and kinetics during materials synthesis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32424371 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-020-0688-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841