4.6 Article

Defect chemistry of the cage compound, Ca12Al14O33-delta-understanding the route from a solid electrolyte to a semiconductor and electride

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 11, Issue 17, Pages 3105-3114

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b818474g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [SPP 1136, Ja 648/9, Wi 952/4]

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A crystallographic cage structure endows mayenite (Ca12Al14O33 or 12CaO center dot 7Al(2)O(3); C(12)A(7)) with remarkable properties, making it either an oxygen solid electrolyte or an inorganic electride upon reduction. In order to better understand the transport properties of C(12)A(7), we measured the equilibrium total conductivity as well as the electronic partial conductivity of single crystal mayenite as functions of activity of oxygen or water vapor at different temperatures in the range 1073 <= T/K <= 1273. A point defect model based on the assumption that the framework [Ca12Al14O32](2+) acts as a pseudo-donor describes well the isothermal conductivity vs. oxygen activity, enabling us to deconvolute the ionic and electronic partial conductivities. The ionic transference number evaluated therefrom clearly demonstrates how C(12)A(7) is converted from a solid electrolyte to an electride depending on the oxygen content. In addition, besides the well known degradation of ionic conductivity by water uptake, a short-term increase of conductivity upon abrupt hydration was recognized and interpreted as due to the transient increase in the concentration of oxygen interstitial along with proton in the initial stage of hydration. For the fully hydrated C(12)A(7), the conductivity relaxation curves upon switching of oxygen activity in a fixed water vapor pressure appear non-monotonic showing the extrema only in the plateau conductivity regime. A defect structure based hypothesis is proposed to explain the 2-fold re-equilibration kinetics.

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