Perovskite-Structured BaScO2(OH) as a Novel Proton Conductor: Heavily Hydrated Phase Obtained via Low-Temperature Synthesis

October 5, 2018

Title

Perovskite-Structured BaScO2(OH) as a Novel Proton Conductor: Heavily Hydrated Phase Obtained via Low-Temperature Synthesis

Author

Rinlee B. Cervera, Shogo Miyoshi, Yukiko Oyama, Youssef E. Elammari, Takehiko Yag, and Shu Yamaguch

Year

2013

Journal

Chemistry of Materials

Abstract

A novel proton-conducting material, BaScO2(OH) has been successfully fabricated. The known high-temperature proton conductors are typically perovskite-type oxides, in which the proton concentration is determined by hydration reaction of oxygen vacancies introduced by a small amount of acceptor dopant. On the other hand, the novel material BaScO2(OH) is still associated with the A2+B4+O3 perovskite structure but with the B-site cation fully consisting of an acceptor cation Sc3+, which facilitates to retain an appreciable amount of protonic defects. While it is difficult to obtain the material by simply hydrating the unhydrated form (Ba2Sc2O5), a combination of a new low-temperature sol–gel synthesis and ultrahigh-pressure (4 GPa) compaction at room-temperature enables us to obtain the heavily hydrated phase BaScO2(OH) due to on-synthesishydration. The BaScO2(OH) synthesized has been proved to be a pseudocubic perovskite phase with XRD and Raman analyses. The thermal dehydration analyses have verified the composition BaScO2(OH) in terms of proton concentration, and their mobile nature has been observed with in situ FT-IR analysis. The protonic conductivity of the material is as high as 1.7 × 10–2 S·cm–1 at 500 °C, which is well higher than the total conductivity of the best proton-conducting perovskite oxides at intermediate temperature range.

Instrument

NRS-5100

Keywords

Raman imaging microscopy, BaScO2(OH); low-temperature synthesis; perovskite oxide; proton conductor; solid electrolyte