Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study

Ionic transport in solid electrolytes can often be approximated as ions performing a sequence of hops between distinct lattice sites. If these hops are uncorrelated, quantitative relationships can be derived that connect microscopic hopping rates to macroscopic transport coefficients; i.e. tracer di...

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Main Author: Benjamin J. Morgan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170824
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spelling doaj-4c6a8236cf224d8b80bd0cc170da9b812020-11-25T03:57:36ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-0141110.1098/rsos.170824170824Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation studyBenjamin J. MorganIonic transport in solid electrolytes can often be approximated as ions performing a sequence of hops between distinct lattice sites. If these hops are uncorrelated, quantitative relationships can be derived that connect microscopic hopping rates to macroscopic transport coefficients; i.e. tracer diffusion coefficients and ionic conductivities. In real materials, hops are uncorrelated only in the dilute limit. At non-dilute concentrations, the relationships between hopping frequency, diffusion coefficient and ionic conductivity deviate from the random walk case, with this deviation quantified by single-particle and collective correlation factors, f and fI, respectively. These factors vary between materials, and depend on the concentration of mobile particles, the nature of the interactions, and the host lattice geometry. Here, we study these correlation effects for the garnet lattice using lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulations. We find that, for non-interacting particles (volume exclusion only), single-particle correlation effects are more significant than for any previously studied three-dimensional lattice. This is attributed to the presence of two-coordinate lattice sites, which causes correlation effects intermediate between typical three-dimensional and one-dimensional lattices. Including nearest-neighbour repulsion and on-site energies produces more complex single-particle correlations and introduces collective correlations. We predict particularly strong correlation effects at xLi=3 (from site energies) and xLi=6 (from nearest-neighbour repulsion), where xLi=9 corresponds to a fully occupied lithium sublattice. Both effects are consequences of ordering of the mobile particles. Using these simulation data, we consider tuning the mobile-ion stoichiometry to maximize the ionic conductivity, and show that the ‘optimal’ composition is highly sensitive to the precise nature and strength of the microscopic interactions. Finally, we discuss the practical implications of these results in the context of lithium garnets and other solid electrolytes.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170824ionic conductionsolid electrolytescorrelation factorslithium garnetslattice-gas monte carlo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin J. Morgan
spellingShingle Benjamin J. Morgan
Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study
Royal Society Open Science
ionic conduction
solid electrolytes
correlation factors
lithium garnets
lattice-gas monte carlo
author_facet Benjamin J. Morgan
author_sort Benjamin J. Morgan
title Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study
title_short Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study
title_full Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study
title_fullStr Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study
title_full_unstemmed Lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulation study
title_sort lattice-geometry effects in garnet solid electrolytes: a lattice-gas monte carlo simulation study
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Ionic transport in solid electrolytes can often be approximated as ions performing a sequence of hops between distinct lattice sites. If these hops are uncorrelated, quantitative relationships can be derived that connect microscopic hopping rates to macroscopic transport coefficients; i.e. tracer diffusion coefficients and ionic conductivities. In real materials, hops are uncorrelated only in the dilute limit. At non-dilute concentrations, the relationships between hopping frequency, diffusion coefficient and ionic conductivity deviate from the random walk case, with this deviation quantified by single-particle and collective correlation factors, f and fI, respectively. These factors vary between materials, and depend on the concentration of mobile particles, the nature of the interactions, and the host lattice geometry. Here, we study these correlation effects for the garnet lattice using lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulations. We find that, for non-interacting particles (volume exclusion only), single-particle correlation effects are more significant than for any previously studied three-dimensional lattice. This is attributed to the presence of two-coordinate lattice sites, which causes correlation effects intermediate between typical three-dimensional and one-dimensional lattices. Including nearest-neighbour repulsion and on-site energies produces more complex single-particle correlations and introduces collective correlations. We predict particularly strong correlation effects at xLi=3 (from site energies) and xLi=6 (from nearest-neighbour repulsion), where xLi=9 corresponds to a fully occupied lithium sublattice. Both effects are consequences of ordering of the mobile particles. Using these simulation data, we consider tuning the mobile-ion stoichiometry to maximize the ionic conductivity, and show that the ‘optimal’ composition is highly sensitive to the precise nature and strength of the microscopic interactions. Finally, we discuss the practical implications of these results in the context of lithium garnets and other solid electrolytes.
topic ionic conduction
solid electrolytes
correlation factors
lithium garnets
lattice-gas monte carlo
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170824
work_keys_str_mv AT benjaminjmorgan latticegeometryeffectsingarnetsolidelectrolytesalatticegasmontecarlosimulationstudy
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