On the Origin of the Non‐Arrhenius Na‐ion Conductivity in Na3OBr

Author:

Darminto Brigita1,Rees Gregory J.12,Cattermull John13,Hashi Kenjiro4,Diaz‐Lopez Maria5,Kuwata Naoaki4,Turrell Stephen J.12,Milan Emily1,Chart Yvonne12,Di Mino Camilla12,Jeong Lee Hyeon126,Goodwin Andrew L.3,Pasta Mauro12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials University of Oxford Oxford OX1 3PH United Kingdom

2. The Faraday Institution Harwell Campus Oxford OX11 0RA United Kingdom

3. Department of Chemistry University of Oxford Oxford OX1 3TA United Kingdom

4. National Institute for Materials Science Tsukuba 305-0044 Japan

5. Diamond Light Source Oxford OX11 0DE United Kingdom

6. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology Ulsan 44919 South Korea

Abstract

AbstractThe sodium‐rich antiperovskites (NaRAPs) with composition Na3OB (B=Br, Cl, I, BH4, etc.) are a family of materials that has recently attracted great interest for application as solid electrolytes in sodium metal batteries. Non‐Arrhenius ionic conductivities have been reported for these materials, the origin of which is poorly understood. In this work, we combined temperature‐resolved bulk and local characterisation methods to gain an insight into the origin of this unusual behaviour using Na3OBr as a model system. We first excluded crystallographic disorder on the anion sites as the cause of the change in activation energy; then identified the presence of a poorly crystalline impurities, not detectable by XRD, and elucidated their effect on ionic conductivity. These findings improve understanding of the processing‐structure‐properties relationships pertaining to NaRAPs and highlight the need to determine these relationships in other materials systems, which will accelerate the development of high‐performance solid electrolytes.

Funder

Faraday Institution

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

University of Warwick

Advantage West Midlands

European Regional Development Fund

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Henry Royce Institute

H2020 European Research Council

Lembaga Pengelola Dana Pendidikan

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry,Catalysis

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