The innovation engine for new materials

Understanding and Exploiting the Splendid Redox Chemistry of Ceria and Its Derivatives

Seminar Group: 

Speaker: 

Professor Sossina M. Haile

Address: 

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Applied Physics Program, Department of Chemistry
Northwestern University

Date: 

Friday, October 16, 2020 - 11:00am

Host: 

Prof. Raphaële Clément

Ceria and its derivatives find use in a wide variety of technologies from traditional applications in solid oxide fuel cells, catalysis, and electrochemical sensors, to new applications in computing, medicine, and water splitting. The suitability of ceria for these many applications derives in part from the redox flexibility of the material, with the predominantly Ce4+ ion adopting the 3+ oxidation state under conditions amenable to external control. The very high oxygen ion transport in suitably doped ceria is a second critical factor driving its technological value. Here we present recent results highlighting transport and redox activity in the (i) bulk, (ii) grain boundary, and (iii) surface regions of ceria. In the case of ceria-zirconia solid solutions we show that with increasing Zr content the bulk oxygen vacancy concentration increases, but the fraction of Ce ions in the 3+ oxidation state dramatically decreases (although in all cases it is higher than in the bulk). Concomitantly, the bulk diffusivity and surface reaction rate constant decrease, again, despite the increased oxygen vacancy concentration. In lightly Sm doped ceria, we examine transport across internal grain boundaries. Using a combination of electron holography and atom probe tomography, we show that even exceptionally pure ceria materials have Si and Al at the internal interfaces and display a positive potential at the grain boundary core, consistent with the incorporation of Si and Al as charge-imbalanced interstitial species. Furthermore, the grain boundary impedance increases with the concentration of these barely detectable impurity species. We attribute the high grain boundary impedance to the positive charge, which depletes the oxygen vacancies in the near-vicinity of the boundaries. These insights suggest new approaches for controlling material behavior for optimal technological characteristics.

 

 

On Zoom.  Please contact host at rclement [at] ucsb [dot] edu for details.