Oxygen Vacancy Ordering and the Conductivity Maximum in Y(2)O(3)-Doped CeO(2)
Journal article, 2012

The defect structure and ionic diffusion processes within the anion-deficient, fluorite structured system Ce(1-x)Y(x)O(2-x/2) have been investigated at high temperatures (873 K-1073 K) as a function of dopant concentration, x, using a combination of neutron diffraction studies, impedance spectroscopy measurements, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using interionic potentials developed from ab initio calculations. Particular attention is paid to the short-range ion-ion correlations, with no strong evidence that the anion vacancies prefer, at high temperature, to reside in the vicinity of either cationic species. However, the vacancy-vacancy interactions play a more important role, with preferential ordering of vacancy pairs along the < 111 > directions, driven by their strong repulsion at closer distances, becoming dominant at high values of x. This effect explains the presence of a maximum in the ionic conductivity in the intermediate temperature range as a function of increasing x. The wider implications of these conclusions for understanding the structure property relationships within anion-deficient fluorite structured oxides are briefly discussed, with reference to complementary studies of yttria and/or scandia doped zirconia published previously.

reverse Monte Carlo (RMC)

zirconia

SOFC electrolytes

yttria-doped ceria

doped ceria (CeO(2))

ordering

cation interactions

molecular-dynamics

construction

molecular dynamics (MD)

fuel-cells

energy

oxygen vacancy

solid oxide electrolyte

ionic-conductivity

Author

M. Burbano

Trinity College Dublin

Stefan Norberg

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Environmental Inorganic Chemistry

S. Hull

STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

Sten Eriksson

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Environmental Inorganic Chemistry

Dario Marrocchelli

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Trinity College Dublin

Paul Madden

University of Oxford

G. W. Watson

Trinity College Dublin

Chemistry of Materials

0897-4756 (ISSN) 1520-5002 (eISSN)

Vol. 24 1 222-229

Subject Categories

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1021/cm2031152

More information

Latest update

5/20/2021