TY - JOUR
T1 - A review of defect structure and chemistry in ceria and its solid solutions
AU - Schmitt, Rafael
AU - Nenning, Andreas
AU - Kraynis, Olga
AU - Korobko, Roman
AU - Frenkel, Anatoly I.
AU - Lubomirsky, Igor
AU - Haile, Sossina M.
AU - Rupp, Jennifer L.M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation under the project numbers 155986 (SNSF starting grant) and 138914. Further support was provided by the US National Science Foundation under award number DMR-1505103. JR thanks the Thomas Lord Foundation for support of her Thomas Lord Assistant Professorship at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering (DMSE) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. IL and AIF acknowledge the NSF-BSF program grant 2018717. AIF acknowledges support by NSF Grant number DMR-1911592. This work was supported in part by the Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology grant 3-12944. This research is made possible in part by the historic generosity of the Harold Perlman Family. The authors would like to thank Dr Mads Weber for fruitful discussions about Raman spectroscopy and Dr Ellen Wachtel for assistance with editing and scientific discussion.
Funding Information:
Sossina Haile is the Walter P. Murphy Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern University. She earned her PhD in Materials Science and Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1992. Haile’s research broadly encompasses materials for sustainable electro- chemical energy technologies. Amongst her many awards, in 2008 Haile received an American Competitiveness and Innovation Fellowship from the U.S. National Science Foundation. She is a fellow of the Materials Research Society, the American Ceramics Society, the African Academy of Sciences, and the Ethiopian Academy of Sciences, and serves on the editorial boards of Materials Horizons and Annual Review of Materials Research.
PY - 2020/1/21
Y1 - 2020/1/21
N2 - Ceria and its solid solutions play a vital role in several industrial processes and devices. These include solar energy-to-fuel conversion, solid oxide fuel and electrolyzer cells, memristors, chemical looping combustion, automotive 3-way catalysts, catalytic surface coatings, supercapacitors and recently, electrostrictive devices. An attractive feature of ceria is the possibility of tuning defect-chemistry to increase the effectiveness of the materials in application areas. Years of study have revealed many features of the long-range, macroscopic characteristics of ceria and its derivatives. In this review we focus on an area of ceria defect chemistry which has received comparatively little attention-defect-induced local distortions and short-range associates. These features are non-periodic in nature and hence not readily detected by conventional X-ray powder diffraction. We compile the relevant literature data obtained by thermodynamic analysis, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy. Each of these techniques provides insight into material behavior without reliance on long-range periodic symmetry. From thermodynamic analyses, association of defects is inferred. From XAFS, an element-specific probe, local structure around selected atomic species is obtained, whereas from Raman spectroscopy, local symmetry breaking and vibrational changes in bonding patterns is detected. We note that, for undoped ceria and its solid solutions, the relationship between short range order and cation-oxygen-vacancy coordination remains a subject of active debate. Beyond collating the sometimes contradictory data in the literature, we strengthen this review by reporting new spectroscopy results and analysis. We contribute to this debate by introducing additional data and analysis, with the expectation that increasing our fundamental understanding of this relationship will lead to an ability to predict and tailor the defect-chemistry of ceria-based materials for practical applications.
AB - Ceria and its solid solutions play a vital role in several industrial processes and devices. These include solar energy-to-fuel conversion, solid oxide fuel and electrolyzer cells, memristors, chemical looping combustion, automotive 3-way catalysts, catalytic surface coatings, supercapacitors and recently, electrostrictive devices. An attractive feature of ceria is the possibility of tuning defect-chemistry to increase the effectiveness of the materials in application areas. Years of study have revealed many features of the long-range, macroscopic characteristics of ceria and its derivatives. In this review we focus on an area of ceria defect chemistry which has received comparatively little attention-defect-induced local distortions and short-range associates. These features are non-periodic in nature and hence not readily detected by conventional X-ray powder diffraction. We compile the relevant literature data obtained by thermodynamic analysis, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy. Each of these techniques provides insight into material behavior without reliance on long-range periodic symmetry. From thermodynamic analyses, association of defects is inferred. From XAFS, an element-specific probe, local structure around selected atomic species is obtained, whereas from Raman spectroscopy, local symmetry breaking and vibrational changes in bonding patterns is detected. We note that, for undoped ceria and its solid solutions, the relationship between short range order and cation-oxygen-vacancy coordination remains a subject of active debate. Beyond collating the sometimes contradictory data in the literature, we strengthen this review by reporting new spectroscopy results and analysis. We contribute to this debate by introducing additional data and analysis, with the expectation that increasing our fundamental understanding of this relationship will lead to an ability to predict and tailor the defect-chemistry of ceria-based materials for practical applications.
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U2 - 10.1039/c9cs00588a
DO - 10.1039/c9cs00588a
M3 - Review article
C2 - 31872840
AN - SCOPUS:85078510433
VL - 49
SP - 554
EP - 592
JO - Chemical Society Reviews
JF - Chemical Society Reviews
SN - 0306-0012
IS - 2
ER -