Crystal Structures and Ionic Conductivities of Ternary Derivatives of the Silver and Copper Monohalides: I. Superionic Phases of Stoichiometry MA4I5:RbAg4I5, KAg4I5, and KCu4I5 |
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Authors: | S Hull D.A Keen D.S SiviaP Berastegui |
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Affiliation: | a The ISIS Facility, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon, OX11 0QX, United Kingdomb Physics Department, Oxford University, Clarendon Laboratory, Parks Road, Oxon, OX1 3PU, United Kingdomc Arrhenius Laboratory, Stockholm University, S-106 91, Stockholm, Sweden |
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Abstract: | The superionic properties of the compounds RbAg4I5, KAg4I5 and KCu4I5 have been investigated by powder neutron diffraction and complex impedance spectroscopy. RbAg4I5 and KAg4I5 have room-temperature ionic conductivities of σ=0.21(6) and 0.08(5) Ω−1 cm−1, respectively, which increase gradually on increasing temperature. KCu4I5 is only stable in the temperature range between 515(5) K and its melting point of 605 K, and its ionic conductivity is σ=0.61(8) Ω−1 cm−1, at T=540 K. At lower temperatures, KCu4I5 disproportionates into KI+4CuI and the ionic conductivity falls by over three orders of magnitude. Least-squares refinements of the powder neutron diffraction data for RbAg4I5 at ambient temperature confirm the reported structure (space group P4132, Z=4, a=11.23934(3) Å), though with some differences in the preferred locations of the mobile Ag+. KAg4I5 and KCu4I5 are found to adopt the same basic structure as RbAg4I5, with the I− forming a β-Mn-type sublattice, with the K+ located in a distorted octahedral environment and the Ag+(Cu+) predominantly distributed over two sites which are tetrahedrally co-ordinated to I−. The implications for the conduction mechanism within these compounds are discussed, using a novel maximum entropy difference Fourier technique to map the distribution of the Ag+(Cu+) within the unit cell. |
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Keywords: | superionic conduction Ag+ diffusion neutron diffraction maximum entropy techniques. |
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