Hydrothermal Synthesis and Crystal Structure of a Novel Bismuth Oxide: (K0.2Sr0.8)(Na0.01Ca0.25Bi0.74)O3

26Citations
Citations of this article
19Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

A novel distorted perovskite-type (K0.2Sr0.8)(Na0.01Ca0.25Bi0.74)O3 was prepared by a hydrothermal method using the starting materials NaBiO3·nH2O, Sr(OH)2·8H2O, Ca(OH)2, and KOH. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction of the novel compound revealed a GdFeO3-related structure belonging to the monoclinic system of the space group Cc with the following cell parameters: a = 11.8927 (17) Å, b = 11.8962 (15) Å, c = 8.4002 (10) Å, and β = 90.116 (9)°. The final R-factors were obtained as R1 = 0.0354 and wR2 = 0.0880 (using all the data). K+ and Sr2+ ions were distributed at four types of A-sites. On the other hand, four Bi5+-sites (Bi1, Bi2, Bi3, and Bi4) were occupied by four Ca2+ ions (Ca1, Ca2, Ca3, and Ca4), and the first three B-sites were occupied predominantly by Bi5+ with Na+ ions. The forth B-site was occupied predominantly by the Ca2+ ion with Bi5+ ions. Two types of B-sites, thus forming tilted distorted (Na/Ca/Bi)O6 and (Bi/Ca)O6 octahedra, have an ordering of 3:1 represented as (K/Sr)4(Na/Ca/Bi)3(Bi/Ca)O12. The distorted (Na/Ca/Bi)O6 and (Ca/Bi)O6 octahedra formed a perovskite-type network by corner sharing with features closely matching those of a GdFeO3-type structure. The novel compound is the first example of a perovskite-type bismuth oxide containing only Bi5+ in a system without a Ba atom and has a unique ordering (3:1) of the B site. The compound showed photocatalytic activity for phenol degradation under visible light irradiation.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hossain, K. M., Saiduzzaman, M., Kumada, N., Takei, T., Yamane, H., & Kabir Rubel, M. H. (2021). Hydrothermal Synthesis and Crystal Structure of a Novel Bismuth Oxide: (K0.2Sr0.8)(Na0.01Ca0.25Bi0.74)O3. ACS Omega, 6(24), 15975–15980. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c01694

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free