Li6SiO4Cl2: A Hexagonal Argyrodite Based on Antiperovskite Layer Stacking
Author(s) -
Alexandra Morscher,
Matthew S. Dyer,
Benjamin B. Duff,
Guopeng Han,
Jacinthe Gamon,
Luke M. Daniels,
Yun Dang,
T. Wesley Surta,
Craig M. Robertson,
Frédéric Blanc,
John B. Claridge,
Matthew J. Rosseinsky
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.1c00157
Subject(s) - antiperovskite , stacking , materials science , fast ion conductor , electrolyte , lithium (medication) , crystallography , chemistry , nanotechnology , layer (electronics) , nitride , electrode , medicine , endocrinology , organic chemistry
A hexagonal analogue, Li 6 SiO 4 Cl 2 , of the cubic lithium argyrodite family of solid electrolytes is isolated by a computation-experiment approach. We show that the argyrodite structure is equivalent to the cubic antiperovskite solid electrolyte structure through anion site and vacancy ordering within a cubic stacking of two close-packed layers. Construction of models that assemble these layers with the combination of hexagonal and cubic stacking motifs, both well known in the large family of perovskite structural variants, followed by energy minimization identifies Li 6 SiO 4 Cl 2 as a stable candidate composition. Synthesis and structure determination demonstrate that the material adopts the predicted lithium site-ordered structure with a low lithium conductivity of ∼10 -10 S cm -1 at room temperature and the predicted hexagonal argyrodite structure above an order-disorder transition at 469.3(1) K. This transition establishes dynamic Li site disorder analogous to that of cubic argyrodite solid electrolytes in hexagonal argyrodite Li 6 SiO 4 Cl 2 and increases Li-ion mobility observed via NMR and AC impedance spectroscopy. The compositional flexibility of both argyrodite and perovskite alongside this newly established structural connection, which enables the use of hexagonal and cubic stacking motifs, identifies a wealth of unexplored chemistry significant to the field of solid electrolytes.
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