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Enhanced Oxide Ion Conductivity by Ta Doping of Ba<sub>3</sub>Nb<sub>1<i>–x</i></sub>Ta<sub><i>x</i></sub>MoO<sub>8.5</sub>
Significant oxide ion conductivity has previously been
reported
for the Ba3M′M″O8.5 family (M′
= Nb5+, V5+; M″ = Mo6+, W6+) of cation-deficient hexagonal perovskite derivatives. These
systems exhibit considerable structural disorder and competitive occupation
of two distinct oxygen positions (O3 site and O2 site), enabling two-dimensional
(2D) ionic conductivity within the ab plane of the
structure; higher occupation of the tetrahedral O3 site vs the octahedral
O2 site is known to be a major factor that promotes oxide ion conductivity.
Previous chemical doping studies have shown that substitution of small
amounts of the M′ or M″ ions can result in significant
changes to both the structure and ionic conductivity. Here, we report
on the electrical and structural properties of the Ba3Nb1–xTaxMoO8.5 series (x = 0.00, 0.025, 0.050, 0.100).
AC impedance measurements show that substitution of Nb5+ with Ta5+ leads to a significant increase in low-temperature
(x = 0.1. Analysis
of neutron and X-ray diffraction (XRD) data confirms that there is
a decrease in the M1O4/M1O6 ratio upon increasing x from 0 to 0.1 in Ba3Nb1–xTaxMoO8.5,
which would usually coincide with a lowering in the conductivity.
However, neutron diffraction results show that Ta doping causes an
increase in the oxide ion conductivity as a result of longer M1–O3
bonds and increased polyhedral distortion