Varying temperature FT-IR and a.c. conductivity analyses of high-capacitance fast ion conducting HCl salt of hexaamidocyclotriphosphazatriene
The HCl salt of hexaamidocyclotriphosphazatriene (HACTP) shows much of the characteristics of the well-established family of solid superionic conductors. The key feature revealing this trend is a Cole–Cole Z″– Z′ dependence tending sharply to a low resistance, especially above 343 K far below the de...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | Solid state ionics 2000-02, Vol.128 (1), p.191-201 |
---|---|
1. Verfasser: | |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | The HCl salt of hexaamidocyclotriphosphazatriene (HACTP) shows much of the characteristics of the well-established family of solid superionic conductors. The key feature revealing this trend is a Cole–Cole
Z″–
Z′ dependence tending sharply to a low resistance, especially above 343 K far below the decomposition temperature, a three orders of magnitude rise in the d.c. (10
−4–10
−1 Ω
−1 cm
−1) and a.c. (10
−7–10
−4 Ω
−1 cm
−1) conductivity, a low ionic relaxation energy of 0.16 eV and a high capacitance of 0.1 F. The electric permittivity loss shows evidence of significant contribution from d.c. conduction. At the molecular scale, the origin of these peculiar features is assigned to a thermally induced structural shift in the HACTP-HCl ring from the puckered
C
3
v
to the higher
D
3
h
symmetry. The thermally induced planar ring supports a better orientation and hence interaction of the conduction ions with the phosphazene ring in the solid state. This structural shift is explicit in a DTA-detected solid-state phase transition activated at 343 K and optimized at 443 K prior to the melting at 513 K and is probed, using structure probe solid state FT-IR (in the same temperature range as the a.c.-conductivity) and
1H NMR in solution. Spectral correlation of solid state FT-IR and solution
1H NMR is necessarily made for distinguishing solid state from intrinsic phenomena. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0167-2738 1872-7689 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0167-2738(99)00300-8 |