Loading…

Lithium-Ion Trapping from Local Structural Distortions in Sodium Super Ionic Conductor (NASICON) Electrolytes

Herein, we report a study on the structural and thermodynamic effects that cation size disparity may have in NASICON-type solid solutions. A sol–gel procedure was used to synthesize two new NASICON-type lithium-ion conductors with nominal compositions LiGe2–y Sn y (PO4)3 and Li1+x Al x Ge2–y–(1/2)x...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Chemistry of materials 2014-08, Vol.26 (16), p.4741-4749
Main Authors: Francisco, Brian E, Stoldt, Conrad R, M’Peko, Jean-Claude
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Herein, we report a study on the structural and thermodynamic effects that cation size disparity may have in NASICON-type solid solutions. A sol–gel procedure was used to synthesize two new NASICON-type lithium-ion conductors with nominal compositions LiGe2–y Sn y (PO4)3 and Li1+x Al x Ge2–y–(1/2)x Sn y–(1/2)x (PO4)3. The effect of tin substitution on structure and lithium-ion conductivity was studied with powder X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, and dielectric spectroscopy. It is found that, although increased unit-cell dimensions derived from X-ray data suggest that tin incorporation should open the conduction bottleneck regions and improve conductivity, a decrease in conductivity is observed. Analysis of the electrical data shows that the conduction activation energy is comprised of contributions from carrier motion and generation, the latter accounting for up to 20% of the total activation energy. This result, currently unreported for NASICON-type materials, is correlated with local structural distortions observed in Raman spectra. It is deduced that the bottleneck regions suffer distortions due to the large ionic radius disparity among cationic constituents, which results in the “trapping” of charge carriers. Data estimated for the entropy of motion are also presented and discussed, considering the most probable thermodynamic equilibrium states.
ISSN:0897-4756
1520-5002
DOI:10.1021/cm5013872