An EPR investigation of defect structure and electron transfer mechanism in mixed-conductive LiBO 2 –V 2 O 5 glasses

Continuous Wave (CW) Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy was used to study the defect structure and electron transfer mechanism in a series of LiBO 2 –V 2 O 5 mixed conductive glasses of varying V 2 O 5 content. These glassy materials are attracting growing interest for energy storage...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials chemistry. A, Materials for energy and sustainability Materials for energy and sustainability, 2021-08, Vol.9 (31), p.16917-16927
Hauptverfasser: Spencer, Jacob N., Folli, Andrea, Ren, Hong, Murphy, Damien M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Continuous Wave (CW) Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy was used to study the defect structure and electron transfer mechanism in a series of LiBO 2 –V 2 O 5 mixed conductive glasses of varying V 2 O 5 content. These glassy materials are attracting growing interest for energy storage devices. At low V 2 O 5 content (VLB1), an isolated S = ½ vanadium defect centre is found at a network modifying position within the LiBO 2 matrix. The observed spin Hamiltonian parameters are consistent with a V 4+ centre possessing a distorted octahedral configuration and d xy orbital ground state. At high V 2 O 5 content (VLB3), the vanadium hyperfine structure is absent indicative of a distinct exchange-narrowed signal. A model was developed to analyse the linewidth and g -tensor component of the EPR signals, revealing a marked temperature dependent behaviour, consistent with a polaron hopping mechanism of electron transfer and inter-electronic exchange along the g 3 direction, coincident with the electron transfer axis. The activation energy ( E a ) was estimated to be 0.081 eV, consistent with other conducting glasses. A relaxation-dominated line broadening mechanism was further supported by multi-frequency EPR measurements, which also identified unresolved features at high frequencies due to unaccounted for anisotropic exchange/speciation within the disordered network. This analysis provides a straight-forward method for the use of EPR to investigate solid-state glassy materials.
ISSN:2050-7488
2050-7496
DOI:10.1039/D1TA02352G