Improving Hydride Conductivity in Layered Perovskites via Crystal Engineering

29 July 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Hydride ion conduction in layered perovskites is of great interest for sustainable-energy applications. In this report we study Ba2ScHO3, a recently synthesized oxyhydride with an unusual anion ordering, using a multifaceted density functional theory approach involving both transition state calculations and molecular dynamics simulations. Beyond simply identifying the key ion migration pathways, we perform detailed analysis of transition states and identify key interactions which drive trends in ionic mobility. Our key findings are that ionic mobility is, remarkably, independent of hydride-oxide disorder, the dominant migration pathway changes under pressure, and a reduction in A-site cation size accelerates hydride diffusion. Local structural flexibility along migration pathways is understood in terms of dimensionality and ionic size, and we thus identify crystal engineering principles for rational design of ion conductors. On the basis of our new insights into these materials, we predict that Sr2ScHO3 will show improved conductivity over existing analogues.

Keywords

perovskite
hydride
ion conductance
density functional theory

Supplementary materials

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Hydride conduction in Ba2ScO3H SI
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