Premium
Associating and Tuning Sodium and Oxygen Mixed‐Ion Conduction in Niobium‐Based Perovskites
Author(s) -
Gouget Guillaume,
Mauvy Fabrice,
Chung UChan,
Fourcade Sébastien,
Duttine Mathieu,
Braida MarcDavid,
Mercier Thierry Le,
Demourgues Alain
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201909254
Subject(s) - ionic conductivity , conductivity , fast ion conductor , materials science , ionic bonding , dielectric spectroscopy , electrochemistry , electrolyte , ion , thermal conduction , perovskite (structure) , oxygen , inorganic chemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , electrode , crystallography , organic chemistry , composite material , chromatography
Pure ionic conductors as solid‐state electrolytes are of high interest in electrochemical energy storage and conversion devices. They systematically involve only one ion as the charge carrier. The association of two mobile ionic species, one positively and the other negatively charged, in a specific network should strongly influence the total ion conduction. Nb 5+ ‐ (4d 0 ) and Ti 4+ ‐based (3d 0 ) derived‐perovskite frameworks containing Na + and O 2− as mobile species are investigated as mixed ion conductors by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The design of Na + blocking layers via sandwiched pellet sintered by spark plasma sintering at high temperatures leads to quantified transport number of both ionic charge carriers t Na+ and t O2− . In the 350–700 °C temperature range, ionic conductivity can be tuned from major Na + contribution ( t Na+ = 88%) for NaNbO 3 to pure O 2− transport in NaNb 0.9 Ti 0.1 O 2.95 phase. Such a Ti‐substitution is accompanied with a ≈100‐fold increase in the oxygen conductivity, approaching the best values for pure oxygen conductors in this temperature range. Besides the demonstration of tunable mixed ion conduction with quantifiable cationic and anionic contributions in a single solid‐state structure, a strategy is established from structural analysis to develop other architectures with improved mixed ionic conductivity.