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In situ investigation of ruthenium doped lanthanum nickel titanium double perovskite and its exsolution behaviour.

Jia GuoAndrey BerenovStephen J Skinner
Published in: Nanoscale advances (2024)
Exsolution, an innovative method for fabricating perovskite-based oxides decorated with metal nanoparticles, has garnered significant interest in the fields of catalyst fabrication and electrochemical devices. Although dopant exsolution from single perovskite structures has been extensively studied, the exsolution behaviour of double perovskite structures remains insufficiently understood. In this study, we synthesized B-site double perovskite Ru-doped lanthanum nickel titanates with a 7.5 at% A-site deficiency, and systematically investigated the exsolution process that formed nickel metal nanoparticles on the material surface, across a broad reduction temperature range of 350-1000 °C. Both Ex situ and in situ characterization revealed that small, uniform Ni nanoparticles exsolved at low temperatures, whereas the exsolution of ruthenium required higher reduction temperatures beyond 1000 °C. Within the reduction temperature range of 350-500 °C, a notable finding is the reconstruction of exsolved nanoparticles, implying that Ni particles exist in a thermodynamically metastable state. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) showed a decreased area specific resistance (ASR) during the progress of exsolution. The increase in current density of a full solid oxide cell (SOC) in electrolysis mode and the doubling of peak power density in fuel cell mode attributed to the exsolution of Ni nanoparticles highlight the potential application of metal exsolution in electrode materials for SOCs.
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