MRS Meetings and Events

 

SF08.03.07 2022 MRS Fall Meeting

Understanding the Mixing and Properties of High Entropy Perovskites

When and Where

Nov 28, 2022
8:00pm - 10:00pm

Hynes, Level 1, Hall A

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Ali Nasrallah1,Ge Wang1,Derek Sinclair1,Colin Freeman1

The University of Sheffield1

Abstract

Ali Nasrallah1,Ge Wang1,Derek Sinclair1,Colin Freeman1

The University of Sheffield1
High-Entropy Oxides (HEOs) have gathered a lot of attention over the past few years particularly around their formation and properties<sup>1–4</sup>. The perovskite lattice (ABO<sub>3</sub>) is a particularly exciting opportunity as mixing can be carried out on both the A or B site presenting a wealth of enthalpic and entropic possibilities to achieve a single-phase solid solution with a favourable Gibbs free energy<sup>4</sup>.<br/>Using a combination of computational modelling and experimental studies, we have examined several 3-, 4-, and 5-B element oxides with combinations of (Ga, Y, In), Nb, (Ti, Zr, Sn). We have studied the influence of a range of factors including the ionic size of the sites, the tolerance factor and the ionic size variation which we can then link to the formation of single-phase materials.<br/>Our experiments on Ba-based perovskites demonstrate that single phases can be formed in a range of 4 and 5-B element perovskites with mixed valence charges (e.g. 3+, 4+ and 5+) but mixing was far more challenging with only 3-B element systems. By adjusting the A-site using Sr and Ca we were able to reduce the ionic size penalties and form further 3-B site single phase systems indicating that the size of the A cation also has an effect on the mixing process.<br/>We have coupled the experimental work with a mixture of classical and ab initio simulation work examining the enthalpy of mixing and comparing to the phase formation from experiment. Our DFT simulations have identified the different mixing and hybridisation characteristics of the ions which affects their ability to mix and can run counter to expected ion size behaviour. Our classical simulations have optimised and examined hundreds of different structures which allows us to comment on the ideality of the solid solutions formed and the competition between entropy and enthalpy in the stability of a phase. We are also able to examine different secondary structures and how their enthalpic stability compares.<br/>From our results, we offer thoughts on the differing rules governing the mixing processes in these perovskite phases.<br/><br/>References<br/>(1) Sarkar, A.; Wang, Q.; Schiele, A.; Chellali, M. R.; Bhattacharya, S. S.; Wang, D.; Brezesinski, T.; Hahn, H.; Velasco, L.; Breitung, B. High-Entropy Oxides: Fundamental Aspects and Electrochemical Properties. <i>Adv. Mater.</i> <b>2019</b>, <i>31</i> (26), 1806236. https://doi.org/10.1002/ADMA.201806236.<br/>(2) Sarkar, A.; Velasco, L.; Wang, D.; Wang, Q.; Talasila, G.; de Biasi, L.; Kübel, C.; Brezesinski, T.; Bhattacharya, S. S.; Hahn, H.; Breitung, B. High Entropy Oxides for Reversible Energy Storage. <i>Nat. Commun.</i> <b>2018</b>, <i>9</i> (1). https://doi.org/10.1038/S41467-018-05774-5.<br/>(3) Rost, C. M.; Sachet, E.; Borman, T.; Moballegh, A.; Dickey, E. C.; Hou, D.; Jones, J. L.; Curtarolo, S.; Maria, J. P. Entropy-Stabilized Oxides. <i>Nat. Commun. 2015 61</i> <b>2015</b>, <i>6</i> (1), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9485.<br/>(4) Banerjee, R.; Chatterjee, S.; Ranjan, M.; Bhattacharya, T.; Mukherjee, S.; Sourav Jana, S.; Dwivedi, A.; Maiti, T. High-Entropy Perovskites: An Emergent Class of Oxide Thermoelectrics with Ultralow Thermal Conductivity. <b>2022</b>, <i>8</i>, 10. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.0c03849.

Keywords

high-entropy alloy | perovskites

Symposium Organizers

Christos Athanasiou, Georgia Institute of Technology
Florian Bouville, Imperial College London
Hortense Le Ferrand, Nanyang Technological University
Izabela Szlufarska, University of Wisconsin

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature