Mechanism of Ion Conduction and Dynamics in Tris(N, N-dimethylformamide) Perchloratosodium Solid Electrolytes
Source
Journal of Physical Chemistry C
ISSN
19327447
Date Issued
2022-03-17
Author(s)
Prakash, Prabhat
Shylendran, Ardhra
Fall, Birane
Zdilla, Michael J.
Wunder, Stephanie L.
Venkatnathan, Arun
Abstract
(DMF)<inf>3</inf>NaClO<inf>4</inf>is a soft-solid cocrystalline electrolyte with channels of Na<sup>+</sup>ions, which can be reversibly converted to a less conductive form (DMF)<inf>2</inf>NaClO<inf>4</inf>by the application of pressure or heat, leading to a melt- or press-castable electrolyte. Molecular dynamics simulations performed on the 3:1 stoichiometry suggest that Na<sup>+</sup>ions conduct via a one-dimensional channel, which is supported by van-Hove autocorrelation function analysis. The simulations show that the transference number for Na<sup>+</sup>ions is 0.43 at room temperature and exceeds 0.5 at higher temperatures in the molten mixture. The calculated activation energy for the diffusion of Na<sup>+</sup>ions from MD simulations is 45 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>. The minimum-energy path of Na<sup>+</sup>ion migration in a 3:1 crystal is assessed using periodic density functional theory calculations, which provides a barrier of 33 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>for Na<sup>+</sup>ion conduction, in reasonable agreement with the experimental value of 25 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>. The motion of Na<sup>+</sup>ions during conduction is vacancy-driven because the presence of a vacancy site enables jump events for Na<sup>+</sup>ions. The activation energy is the penalty for a sodium ion to leave the octahedrally coordinated DMF ligand field via a transition state where only three molecules of DMF form a 3-O-Na trigonal planar geometry, with no involvement of ClO<inf>4</inf><sup>-</sup>in the coordination sphere of the transition state. In contrast, the calculated activation energy barrier for the 2:1 stoichiometry is higher (E<inf>a,DFT</inf>= 43 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>, E<inf>a,exp</inf>= 49 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>) due at least in part to the partial coordination of strongly binding perchlorate anions with Na<sup>+</sup>ions in the transition state.
