Issue 23, 2023

Incorporation of protons and hydroxide species in BaZrO3 and BaCeO3

Abstract

Barium zirconate (BaZrO3 or BZO) and barium cerate (BaCeO3 or BCO) are among the best-performing proton-conducting oxides used as electrolytes in all-solid-state fuel and/or electrolysis cells. During synthesis, they are seeded with oxygen vacancies (V2+O), which charge-compensate with acceptor dopants such as yttrium (YZr) and, upon exposure to water vapor, are replaced by interstitial protons (H+i). Here, we investigate this and alternative processes for protonation by calculating defect formation energies, concentrations, and migration barriers for several relevant species, including H+i, V2+O, interstitial oxygen (O2−i), and interstitial hydroxide (OHi), using density functional theory. We confirm that V2+O are favorable under typical operating conditions, although at lower partial pressures of H2 gas and wet conditions, H+i becomes the dominant donor species. Higher H+i concentrations in BCO than in BZO under comparable conditions help to explain the higher conductivity measured in BCO. OHi species are present in low concentrations in the bulk (particularly in BZO; they may incorporate in BCO under wet conditions), and their migration is slow; however, they may form at surfaces and help seed materials with H+i. Alloying BZO and BCO improves ionic conduction in general, although the presence of native defects tends to impede kinetics. Our results show that high ionic conductivity can be achieved through optimizing synthesis conditions to maximize the concentrations of H+i, as well as reducing defect-rich regions such as grain boundaries.

Graphical abstract: Incorporation of protons and hydroxide species in BaZrO3 and BaCeO3

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Jun 2023
Accepted
12 Oct 2023
First published
18 Oct 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Mater. Adv., 2023,4, 6233-6243

Incorporation of protons and hydroxide species in BaZrO3 and BaCeO3

A. J. E. Rowberg, M. Li, T. Ogitsu and J. B. Varley, Mater. Adv., 2023, 4, 6233 DOI: 10.1039/D3MA00308F

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