NASICON-type materials such as rhombohedral LiTi2(PO4)3 (LTP), belonging to the R-3c space group, have been studied as potential solid-state electrolytes because of their thermal and chemical stability, as well high ionic diffusion attributed to their 3D framework consisting of TiO6 octahedra, corner-linked to PO4 tetrahedra, allowing for fast transportation of Li+ cations. [1] However, the room-temperature conductivity of LTP is not practical for use in Lithium ion batteries (LIBs) as it is approximately 4×10-7 S cm-1. [2] Research around this class of materials has been focused on ways to increase their conductivities, including tuning the bottleneck size by substituting Ti4+ with other cations such as Zr4+ and Hf4+, and increasing Li+ concentration by lattice site substitution with M3+ cations as in Al-doped LTP. [3, 4] In the former case, substitutions in the framework with cations of larger ionic radii increase the lattice constants a and c, resulting in a bigger bottleneck size, thus higher conductivity of the mobile cations, Li+.
In this work, we explore the possibility of lattice substitution as well as investigate if Sn4+-doped LTP formulations exhibit an improved ionic conductivity compared to LTP. Materials of the general formula Li〖Ti〗_(2-x) 〖Sn〗_x (〖PO〗_4 )_3 (for 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 50 mole % Sn) have been synthesized following the conventional solid-state method. Room-temperature X-ray diffraction was employed as the primary characterization technique, giving insight into the phase compositions and relative phase purities of the products. Room-temperature Raman spectroscopy was used to further establish the structural properties of LTP as a function of dopant percentage. Information about the phase stabilities of the aforementioned materials was obtained by differential thermal analysis, establishing whether or not there was any temperature-dependent polymorphism exhibited by the said products. The room-temperature conductivities were determined using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy.
References:
1. Anantharamulu, N., Rao, K.K., Rambabu, G., Kumar, B.V., Radha, V. and Vithal, M., 2011. A wide-ranging review on Nasicon type materials. Journal of materials science, 46(9), pp.2821-2837.
2. Bachman, J.C., Muy, S., Grimaud, A., Chang, H.H., Pour, N., Lux, S.F., Paschos, O., Maglia, F., Lupart, S., Lamp, P. and Giordano, L., 2015. Inorganic solid-state electrolytes for lithium batteries: mechanisms and properties governing ion conduction. Chemical reviews, 116(1), pp.140-162.
3. Aono, H., Sugimoto, E., Sadaoka, Y., Imanaka, N. and Adachi, G.Y., 1993. The Electrical Properties of Ceramic Electrolytes for LiM x Ti2− x (PO 4) 3+ yLi2 O, M= Ge, Sn, Hf, and Zr Systems. Journal of the Electrochemical Society, 140(7), pp.1827-1833.
4. Wang, S., Ben, L., Li, H. and Chen, L., 2014. Identifying Li+ ion transport properties of aluminum doped lithium titanium phosphate solid electrolyte at wide temperature range. Solid State Ionics, 268, pp.110-116.