The high-temperature cubic form of bismuth oxide, δ-Bi2O3, is the best intermediate-temperature oxide-ionic conductor known. The most elegant way of stabilizing δ-Bi2O3 to room temperature, while preserving a large part of its conductivity, is by doping with higher valent transition metals to create wide solid-solutions fields with exceedingly rare and complex (3 + 3)-dimensional incommensurately modulated "hypercubic" structures. These materials remain poorly understood because no such structure has ever been quantitatively solved and refined, due to both the complexity of the problem and a lack of adequate experimental data. We have addressed this by growing a large (centimeter scale) crystal using a novel refluxing floating-zone method, collecting high-quality single-crystal neutron diffraction data, and treating its structure together with X-ray diffraction data within the superspace symmetry formalism. The structure can be understood as an "inflated" pyrochlore, in which corner-connected NbO6 octahedral chains move smoothly apart to accommodate the solid solution. While some oxide vacancies are ordered into these chains, the rest are distributed throughout a continuous three-dimensional network of wide δ-Bi2O3-like channels, explaining the high oxide-ionic conductivity compared to commensurately modulated phases in the same pseudobinary system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja3109328 | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
December 2024
Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Materials Genome Engineering, Department of Physical Chemistry, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China.
Solid oxide ionic conductors with high ionic conductivity are highly desired for oxide-based electrochemical and energy devices, such as solid oxide fuel cells. However, achieving high ionic conductivity at low temperatures, particularly for practical out-of-plane transport applications, remains a challenge. In this study, leveraging the emergent interphase strain methodology, we achieve an exceptional low-temperature out-of-plane ionic conductivity in NaBiTiO (NBT)-MgO nanopillar-array films.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
April 2022
MOE Key Laboratory of New Processing Technology for Nonferrous Metals and Materials, Guangxi Key Laboratory of Optical and Electronic Materials and Devices, Guangxi Universities Key Laboratory of Nonferrous Metal Oxide Electronic Functional Materials and Devices, and College of Materials Science and Engineering, Guilin University of Technology, Guilin 541004, P. R. China.
The LaO/SrO/GaO ternary system contains several compounds with remarkable oxide or proton ionic conduction. Among them, the layered LaSr(GaO)O compound is a less commonly studied material. Here, the crystal structure, electrical conduction properties, and ionic migration mechanism of the LaSr(GaO) O (0 ≤ ≤ 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
January 2022
The Chemistry Department, University of Aberdeen, Meston Walk, Aberdeen AB24 3UE, United Kingdom.
BaVWO is an oxide ion conductor with a bulk conductivity of 5.0 × 10 S cm at 600 °C. BaVWO is anomalous to the other BaM'M″O (M' = Nb; M″ = Mo, W) oxide ionic conductors, as it exhibits cation order with vanadium and tungsten on the M1 site only.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
September 2020
College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, 100871, Beijing, P. R. China.
CeNbO, a family of oxygen hyperstoichiometry materials with varying oxygen content (CeNbO, CeNbO, CeNbO, CeNbO) that shows mixed electronic and oxide ionic conduction, has been known for four decades. However, the oxide ionic transport mechanism has remained unclear due to the unknown atomic structures of CeNbO and CeNbO. Here, we report the complex (3 + 1)D incommensurately modulated structure of CeNbO, and the supercell structure of CeNbO from single nanocrystals by using a three-dimensional electron diffraction technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
November 2019
Department of Mechanical Convergence Engineering , Hanyang University, Seongdong-gu, 222 Wangsimni-ro , Seoul 133-791 , Korea.
In this Research Article, gadolinia-doped ceria (GDC), which is a highly catalyzed oxide ionic conductor, was explored to further improve oxygen surface reaction rates using a grain-controlled layer (GCL) concept. Typically, GDC materials have been used as a cathode functional layer by coating the GDC between the electrode and electrolyte to accelerate the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). To further improve the oxygen surface kinetics of the GDC cathodic layer, we modified the grain boundary density and crystallinity developed in the GDC layer by adjusting RF power conditions during the sputtering process.
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