Solid oxide-ion conductors are crucial for enabling clean and efficient energy devices such as solid oxide fuel cells. Hexagonal perovskite-related oxides have been placed at the forefront of high-performance oxide-ion conductors, with Ba Nb Mo O (x = 0-0.1) being an archetypal example. Herein, high oxide-ion conductivity and stability under reducing conditions in Ba Ta Mo O are reported by investigating the solid solutions Ba Ta Mo O (x = 0.2-0.7). Neutron diffraction indicates a large number of interstitial oxide ions in Ba Ta Mo O , leading to a high level of oxide-ion conductivity (e.g., 1.08 × 10 S cm at 377 °C). The conductivity of Ba Ta Mo O is higher than that of Ba Nb MoO and conventional yttria-stabilized zirconia. In contrast to Ba Nb Mo O (x = 0-0.1), the oxide-ion conduction in Ba Ta Mo O is dominant even in highly reducing atmospheres (e.g., oxygen partial pressure of 1.6 × 10 atm at 909 °C). From structural analyses of the synchrotron X-ray diffraction data for Ba Ta Mo O , contrasting X-ray scattering powers of Ta and Mo allow identification of the preferential occupation of Mo adjacent to the intrinsically oxygen-deficient layers, as supported by DFT calculations. The high conductivity and chemical and electrical stability in Ba Ta Mo O provide a strategy for the development of solid electrolytes based on hexagonal perovskite-related oxides.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202106785 | DOI Listing |
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