Abstract: | This paper illustrates from a phenomenological point of view why the study of superionic conductors is essentially a study of disorders. Crystals that are good ionic conductors lack a long-range order in their mobile-ion sublattice. Moreover, low-temperature anomalies typical of amorphous materials appear to be rather common in superionic crystals. In several solid electrolytes the coupling between “disorder modes” typical of glasses and translational degrees of freedom of the ions can be shown to enhance ionic diffusion. The observed, or expected, properties of these superionic conductors are briefly discussed. The hypothesis that disorder may often play a dynamic role in ion transport in solids suggests ways to synthesize materials of technological interest. |