Structure and properties of complex hydride perovskite materials

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Abstract

Perovskite materials host an incredible variety of functionalities. Although the lightest element, hydrogen, is rarely encountered in oxide perovskite lattices, it was recently observed as the hydride anion H-, substituting for the oxide anion in BaTiO 3. Here we present a series of 30 new complex hydride perovskite-type materials, based on the non-spherical tetrahydroborate anion BH4- and new synthesis protocols involving rare-earth elements. Photophysical, electronic and hydrogen storage properties are discussed, along with counterintuitive trends in structural behaviour. The electronic structure is investigated theoretically with density functional theory solid-state calculations. BH 4 -specific anion dynamics are introduced to perovskites, mediating mechanisms that freeze lattice instabilities and generate supercells of up to 16 × the unit cell volume in AB(BH 4) 3. In this view, homopolar hydridic di-hydrogen contacts arise as a potential tool with which to tailor crystal symmetries, thus merging concepts of molecular chemistry with ceramic-like host lattices. Furthermore, anion mixing BH4- → X-(X- =Cl-, Br-, I-) provides a link to the known ABX 3 halides.

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Schouwink, P., Ley, M. B., Tissot, A., Hagemann, H., Jensen, T. R., Smrčok, ̗ubomír, & Černý, R. (2014). Structure and properties of complex hydride perovskite materials. Nature Communications, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6706

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