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Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System

[Image: see text] New solid electrolytes are crucial for the development of all-solid-state lithium batteries with advantages in safety and energy densities over current liquid electrolyte systems. While some of the best solid-state Li(+)-ion conductors are based on sulfides, their air sensitivity m...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Ludan, Malys, Marcin, Jamroz, Jan, Krok, Franciszek, Wrobel, Wojciech, Hull, Stephen, Yan, Haixue, Abrahams, Isaac
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10394663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37449705
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c01222
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author Zhang, Ludan
Malys, Marcin
Jamroz, Jan
Krok, Franciszek
Wrobel, Wojciech
Hull, Stephen
Yan, Haixue
Abrahams, Isaac
author_facet Zhang, Ludan
Malys, Marcin
Jamroz, Jan
Krok, Franciszek
Wrobel, Wojciech
Hull, Stephen
Yan, Haixue
Abrahams, Isaac
author_sort Zhang, Ludan
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] New solid electrolytes are crucial for the development of all-solid-state lithium batteries with advantages in safety and energy densities over current liquid electrolyte systems. While some of the best solid-state Li(+)-ion conductors are based on sulfides, their air sensitivity makes them less commercially attractive, and attention is refocusing on air-stable oxide-based systems. Among these, the LISICON-structured systems, such as Li(2+2x)Zn(1–x)GeO(4) and Li(3+x)V(1–x)Ge(x)O(4), have been relatively well studied. However, other systems such as the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) system, which also show LISICON-type structures, have been relatively little explored. In this work, the Li(4–2x)Ge(1–x)Mo(x)O(4) solid solution is investigated systematically, including the solid solution limit, structural stability, local structure, and the corresponding electrical behavior. It is found that a γ-LISICON structured solution is formed in the range of 0.1 ≤ x < 0.4, differing in structure from the two end members, Li(4)GeO(4) and Li(2)MoO(4). With increasing Mo content, the β-phase becomes increasingly more stable than the γ-phase, and at x = 0.5, a pure β-phase (β-Li(3)Ge(0.5)Mo(0.5)O(4)) is readily isolated. The structure of this previously unknown compound is presented, along with details of the defect structure of Li(3.6)Ge(0.8)Mo(0.2)O(4) (x = 0.2) based on neutron diffraction data. Two basic types of defects are identified in Li(3.6)Ge(0.8)Mo(0.2)O(4) involving interstitial Li(+)-ions in octahedral sites, with evidence for these coming together to form larger defect clusters. The x = 0.2 composition shows the highest conductivity of the series, with values of 1.11 × 10(–7) S cm(–1) at room temperature rising to 5.02 × 10(–3) S cm(–1) at 250 °C.
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spelling pubmed-103946632023-08-03 Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System Zhang, Ludan Malys, Marcin Jamroz, Jan Krok, Franciszek Wrobel, Wojciech Hull, Stephen Yan, Haixue Abrahams, Isaac Inorg Chem [Image: see text] New solid electrolytes are crucial for the development of all-solid-state lithium batteries with advantages in safety and energy densities over current liquid electrolyte systems. While some of the best solid-state Li(+)-ion conductors are based on sulfides, their air sensitivity makes them less commercially attractive, and attention is refocusing on air-stable oxide-based systems. Among these, the LISICON-structured systems, such as Li(2+2x)Zn(1–x)GeO(4) and Li(3+x)V(1–x)Ge(x)O(4), have been relatively well studied. However, other systems such as the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) system, which also show LISICON-type structures, have been relatively little explored. In this work, the Li(4–2x)Ge(1–x)Mo(x)O(4) solid solution is investigated systematically, including the solid solution limit, structural stability, local structure, and the corresponding electrical behavior. It is found that a γ-LISICON structured solution is formed in the range of 0.1 ≤ x < 0.4, differing in structure from the two end members, Li(4)GeO(4) and Li(2)MoO(4). With increasing Mo content, the β-phase becomes increasingly more stable than the γ-phase, and at x = 0.5, a pure β-phase (β-Li(3)Ge(0.5)Mo(0.5)O(4)) is readily isolated. The structure of this previously unknown compound is presented, along with details of the defect structure of Li(3.6)Ge(0.8)Mo(0.2)O(4) (x = 0.2) based on neutron diffraction data. Two basic types of defects are identified in Li(3.6)Ge(0.8)Mo(0.2)O(4) involving interstitial Li(+)-ions in octahedral sites, with evidence for these coming together to form larger defect clusters. The x = 0.2 composition shows the highest conductivity of the series, with values of 1.11 × 10(–7) S cm(–1) at room temperature rising to 5.02 × 10(–3) S cm(–1) at 250 °C. American Chemical Society 2023-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10394663/ /pubmed/37449705 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c01222 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Zhang, Ludan
Malys, Marcin
Jamroz, Jan
Krok, Franciszek
Wrobel, Wojciech
Hull, Stephen
Yan, Haixue
Abrahams, Isaac
Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System
title Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System
title_full Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System
title_fullStr Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System
title_full_unstemmed Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System
title_short Structure and Conductivity in LISICON Analogues within the Li(4)GeO(4)–Li(2)MoO(4) System
title_sort structure and conductivity in lisicon analogues within the li(4)geo(4)–li(2)moo(4) system
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10394663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37449705
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c01222
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