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Cubic Sr2ScGaO5 Perovskite: Structural Stability, Oxygen Defect Structure, and Ion Conductivity Explored on Single Crystals.

Serena CoralliniMonica CerettiAlain CoussonClemens RitterMarco LonghinPhilippe PapetWerner Paulus
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2017)
Oxygen-deficient Sr2ScGaO5 single crystals with a cubic perovskite structure were grown by the floating-zone technique. The transparent crystals of this pure 3D oxygen electrolyte are metastable at ambient temperature, showing one-sixth of all oxygen positions vacant. While neutron single-crystal diffraction, followed by maximum entropy analysis, revealed a strong anharmonic displacements for the oxygen atoms, a predominant formation of ScO6 octahedra and GaO4 tetrahedra is indicated by Raman spectroscopic studies, resulting in a complex oxygen defect structure with short-range order. Temperature-dependent X-ray powder diffraction (XPD) and neutron powder diffraction (NPD) studies reveal the cubic Sr2ScGaO5 to be thermodynamically stable only above 1400 °C, while the stable modification below this temperature shows the brownmillerite framework with orthorhombic symmetry. Cubic Sr2ScGaO5 remains surprisingly kinetically stable upon heating from ambient temperature to 1300 °C, indicating a huge inertia for the retransformation toward the thermodynamically stable brownmillerite phase. Ionic conductivity investigated by impedance spectroscopy was found to be 10-4 S/cm at 600 °C, while oxygen 18O/16O isotope exchange indicates a free oxygen mobility to set in at around 500 °C.
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