Experimental and Theoretical Evidences of p-Type Conductivity in Nickel Carbodiimide Nanoparticles with a Delafossite Structure Type.
Tengfei JiangBaptiste PolteauYoann FarréLaurent CarioCamille LatoucheYann PellegrinMohammed BoujtitaFabrice OdobelFranck TessierFrançois CheviréStéphane JobicPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2017)
Nickel carbodiimide (NiCN2) was synthesized using a two-step precipitation-decomposition route leading to a brown powder with gypsum-flower-like morphology and a large specific surface area (75 m2/g). This layered material crystallizes in the 2H structure type of delafossite (space group P63/mmc), which is built upon infinite 2/∞[NiN2] layers connected by linear carbodiimide ([N═C═N]2-) bridges. An X-ray diffraction Rietveld refinement and thermal analyses pointed out some nickel deficiencies in the material, and band structure calculations carried out on the defect compound predicted p-type conductivity in relation to a slight amount of N2-. This p-type conductivity was demonstrated by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements, and a flat band potential of 0.90 V vs SCE at pH 9.4 was measured. This value, which is more positive than those of CuGaO2 and CuCrO2 delafossite oxides and NiO, prompted us to test NiCN2 nanoparticles as a photocathode in p-type dye-sensitized solar cells.