Mechanistic Origin of Superionic Lithium Diffusion in Anion-Disordered Li6PS5X Argyrodites
Author(s) -
Benjamin J. Morgan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c03738
Subject(s) - lithium (medication) , ion , substructure , ionic bonding , diffusion , ionic conductivity , chemical physics , chemistry , fast ion conductor , crystallography , inorganic chemistry , electrolyte , physics , thermodynamics , medicine , organic chemistry , structural engineering , electrode , engineering , endocrinology
The rational development of fast-ion-conducting solid electrolytes for all-solid-state lithium-ion batteries requires understanding the key structural and chemical principles that give some materials their exceptional ionic conductivities. For the lithium argyrodites Li 6 PS 5 X (X = Cl, Br, or I), the choice of the halide, X, strongly affects the ionic conductivity, giving room-temperature ionic conductivities for X = {Cl,Br} that are ×10 3 higher than for X = I. This variation has been attributed to differing degrees of S/X anion disorder. For X = {Cl,Br}, the S/X anions are substitutionally disordered, while for X = I, the anion substructure is fully ordered. To better understand the role of substitutional anion disorder in enabling fast lithium-ion transport, we have performed a first-principles molecular dynamics study of Li 6 PS 5 I and Li 6 PS 5 Cl with varying amounts of S/X anion-site disorder. By considering the S/X anions as a tetrahedrally close-packed substructure, we identify three partially occupied lithium sites that define a contiguous three-dimensional network of face-sharing tetrahedra. The active lithium-ion diffusion pathways within this network are found to depend on the S/X anion configuration. For anion-disordered systems, the active site-site pathways give a percolating three-dimensional diffusion network; whereas for anion-ordered systems, critical site-site pathways are inactive, giving a disconnected diffusion network with lithium motion restricted to local orbits around S positions. Analysis of the lithium substructure and dynamics in terms of the lithium coordination around each sulfur site highlights a mechanistic link between substitutional anion disorder and lithium disorder. In anion-ordered systems, the lithium ions are pseudo-ordered, with preferential 6-fold coordination of sulfur sites. Long-ranged lithium diffusion would disrupt this SLi 6 pseudo-ordering, and is, therefore, disfavored. In anion-disordered systems, the pseudo-ordered 6-fold S-Li coordination is frustrated because of Li-Li Coulombic repulsion. Lithium positions become disordered, giving a range of S-Li coordination environments. Long-ranged lithium diffusion is now possible with no net change in S-Li coordination numbers. This gives rise to superionic lithium transport in the anion-disordered systems, effected by a concerted string-like diffusion mechanism.
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