Abstract
Lithium fluoride serves as a model substance to study Li and F hopping processes in a material solely composed of mobile ions with an opposite charge. In its microcrystalline form, it is known to be a very poor ionic conductor. Here, we tried to boost ion dynamics in LiF by taking advantage of size effects and the introduction of structural disorder. Compared to micro-LiF, we observed an increase of the ion conductivity by 2 orders of magnitude for nanocrystalline LiF prepared by high-energy ball milling. A further boost might be achieved in nanocrystalline two-phase systems consisting of LiF and an insulator, such as amphoteric γ-Al2O3. In such dispersed ionic conductors, percolating conductor/insulator pathways are anticipated enabling the ions to move quickly over long distances. Indeed, for nano-LiF:Al2O3, another drastic increase of ionic conductivity by 3 orders of magnitude (393 K) is achieved by interface engineering. The activation energy characterizing long-range ion transport is reduced from 0.98 eV (nanocrystalline LiF) to 0.79 eV for (LiF)0.86(Al2O3)0.14. 7Li nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements showed that Li+ is mainly responsible for this increase seen for nano-LiF:Al2O3. 27Al magic angle spinning NMR revealed that pentacoordinated Al species act as anchor sites for F- anions (and Li+). This mechanism is assumed to lead to a 3D network of fast Li+ diffusion pathways along the conductor/insulator interfaces.
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CITATION STYLE
Breuer, S., Pregartner, V., Lunghammer, S., & Wilkening, H. M. R. (2019). Dispersed Solid Conductors: Fast Interfacial Li-Ion Dynamics in Nanostructured LiF and LiF γ-Al2O3 Composites. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 123(9), 5222–5230. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b10978
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