4.5 Article

Influence of defects on ionic transport in LiTaO3 - A study using EXAFS and positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy

Journal

SOLID STATE IONICS
Volume 352, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ssi.2020.115355

Keywords

Lithium tantalate; EXAFS; Positron lifetime spectroscopy; Defects; Ionic conductivity

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [WI3600/2-1(4-1)]
  2. Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy
  3. Austrian National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development

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Defects of various types in crystalline and nanocrystalline materials govern a range of electrical, optical and mechanical properties. In particular, they are at the heart of translational ion dynamics in solid electrolytes. One of the most prominent examples revealing a drastic increase in ionic conductivity sigma(DC) by several orders of magnitude when going from an ordered crystalline matrix to a structurally disordered one is lithium tantalate. Here, structurally disordered, nanocrystalline LiTaO3 served as a model substance to shed light on the question to what extent the degree of disorder decreases upon annealing an originally defect-rich oxide. Disorder can be introduced by high-energy ball milling of LiTaO3 crystallites with diameters in the mu m range. Broadband conductivity spectroscopy, EXAFS and positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy were used to correlate ion transport properties with interatomic distances, bond distortions and positron lifetimes. It turned out that milling times of only 30 min are sufficient to generate a highly defective oxide. Upon annealing at temperatures of T = 200 degrees C the defects can almost be preserved. Annealing at 750 degrees C for 1 h is needed to induce healing of the defects. Although we observe a recovery of the original interatomic distances and an increase in activation energy E-a for ionic transport from 0.75 eV to 0.81 eV, the initial transport properties of the unmilled sample (0.97 eV) cannot be fully restored. Most interestingly, the change in E-a is accompanied by a change of the entropy-controlled Arrhenius pre-factor governing the temperature dependence of sigma T-DC. Moreover, positron lifetimes remain high in the annealed samples. Hence, our results point to samples with fewer distortions but still rich in vacancy-type defects. Altogether, the combination of ball milling and annealing helps adjust ionic conductivities in LiTaO3 to vary over 4 to 5 orders of magnitude.

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