posted on 2019-08-19, 19:33authored byChloe
A. Fuller, Quentin Berrod, Bernhard Frick, Mark R. Johnson, Stewart J. Clark, John S. O. Evans, Ivana Radosavljevic Evans
Brownmillerite-type Sr2ScGaO5 has been investigated
by a range of experimental X-ray and neutron scattering techniques
(diffraction, total scattering, and spectroscopy) and density functional
theory calculations in order to characterize its structure and dynamics.
The material undergoes a second-order phase transition on heating
during which a rearrangement of the (GaO4/2)∞ tetrahedral chains occurs, such that they change from being essentially
fully ordered in a polar structure at room temperature to being orientationally
disordered above 400 °C. Pair distribution function analysis
carried out using neutron total scattering data suggests that GaO4 tetrahedra remain as fairly rigid units above and below this
transition, whereas coordination polyhedra in the (ScO6/2)∞ layers distort more. Inelastic neutron scattering
and phonon calculations reveal the particular modes that are associated
with this structural change, which may assist ionic conductivity in
the material at higher temperatures. On the basis of the correlations
between these findings and the measured conductivity, we have synthesized
a derivative compound with increased conductivity and suggest a possible
conduction mechanism in these brownmillerite-type solid electrolytes.