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Intricate Short-Range Ordering and Strongly Anisotropic Transport Properties of Li1–xSn2+xAs2
Author(s) -
Kathleen Lee,
Derrick C. Kaseman,
Sabyasachi Sen,
Ivan Hung,
Zhehong Gan,
Birgit Gerke,
Rainer Pöttgen,
Mikhail Feygenson,
Jörg Neuefeind,
O. I. Lebedev,
Kirill Kovnir
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.5b00237
Subject(s) - chemistry , crystallography , octahedron , ternary operation , neutron diffraction , anisotropy , synchrotron , pair distribution function , electrical resistivity and conductivity , x ray crystallography , high resolution transmission electron microscopy , crystal structure , diffraction , nanotechnology , materials science , transmission electron microscopy , physics , optics , mathematical analysis , mathematics , quantum mechanics , computer science , nuclear physics , electrical engineering , programming language , engineering
A new ternary compound, Li(1-x)Sn(2+x)As2, 0.2 < x < 0.4, was synthesized via solid-state reaction of elements. The compound crystallizes in a layered structure in the R3̅m space group (No. 166) with Sn-As layers separated by layers of jointly occupied Li/Sn atoms. The Sn-As layers are comprised of Sn3As3 puckered hexagons in a chair conformation that share all edges. Li/Sn atoms in the interlayer space are surrounded by a regular As6 octahedron. Thorough investigation by synchrotron X-ray and neutron powder diffraction indicate no long-range Li/Sn ordering. In contrast, the local Li/Sn ordering was revealed by synergistic investigations via solid-state (6,7)Li NMR spectroscopy, HRTEM, STEM, and neutron and X-ray pair distribution function analyses. Due to their different chemical natures, Li and Sn atoms tend to segregate into Li-rich and Sn-rich regions, creating substantial inhomogeneity on the nanoscale. The inhomogeneous local structure has a high impact on the physical properties of the synthesized compounds: the local Li/Sn ordering and multiple nanoscale interfaces result in unexpectedly low thermal conductivity and highly anisotropic resistivity in Li(1-x)Sn(2+x)As2.

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