Separating bulk from grain boundary Li ion conductivity in the sol-gel prepared solid electrolyte Li1.5Al0.5Ti1.5(PO4)3
Lithium aluminium titanium phosphate (LATP) belongs to one of the most promising solid electrolytes. Besides sufficiently high electrochemical stability, its use in lithium-based all-solid-state batteries crucially depends on the ionic transport properties. While many impedance studies can be found...
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Zusammenfassung: | Lithium aluminium titanium phosphate (LATP) belongs to one of the most promising solid electrolytes. Besides sufficiently high electrochemical stability, its use in lithium-based all-solid-state batteries crucially depends on the ionic transport properties. While many impedance studies can be found in literature that report on overall ion conductivities, a discrimination of bulk and grain boundary electrical responses
via
conductivity spectroscopy has rarely been reported so far. Here, we took advantage of impedance measurements that were carried out at low temperatures to separate bulk contributions from the grain boundary responses. It turned out that bulk ion conductivity is by at least three orders of magnitude higher than ion transport across the grain boundary regions. At temperatures well below ambient long-range Li ion dynamics is governed by activation energies ranging from 0.26 to 0.29 eV depending on the sintering conditions. As an example, at temperatures as low as 173 K, the bulk ion conductivity, measured in N
2
inert gas atmosphere, is in the order of 8.1 × 10
−6
S cm
−1
. Extrapolating this value to room temperature yields
ca.
3.4 × 10
−3
S cm
−1
at 293 K. Interestingly, exposing the dense pellets to air atmosphere over a long period of time causes a significant decrease of bulk ion transport. This process can be reversed if the phosphate is calcined at elevated temperatures again.
Impedance spectroscopy measurements down to very low temperatures allowed for resolving bulk ion transport properties in highly conducting ceramic electrolytes. |
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ISSN: | 2050-7488 2050-7496 |
DOI: | 10.1039/c5ta06379e |