J.
Dolyniuk
a,
P. S.
Whitfield
b,
K.
Lee‡
a,
O. I.
Lebedev
c and
K.
Kovnir
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA. E-mail: kkovnir@ucdavis.edu
bChemical and Engineering Materials Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830, USA
cLaboratoire CRISMAT, ENSICAEN, CNRS UMR 6508, 6 Boulevard du Mareéchal Juin, F-14050 Caen, France
First published on 20th February 2017
Order–disorder–order phase transitions in the clathrate-I Ba8Cu16P30 were induced and controlled by aliovalent substitutions of Zn into the framework. Unaltered Ba8Cu16P30 crystallizes in an ordered orthorhombic (Pbcn) clathrate-I superstructure that maintains complete segregation of metal and phosphorus atoms over 23 different crystallographic positions in the clathrate framework. The driving force for the formation of this Pbcn superstructure is the avoidance of Cu–Cu bonds. This superstructure is preserved upon aliovalent substitution of Zn for Cu in Ba8Cu16−xZnxP30 with 0 < x < 1.6 (10% Zn/Mtotal), but vanishes at greater substitution concentrations. Higher Zn concentrations (up to 35% Zn/Mtotal) resulted in the additional substitution of Zn for P in Ba8M16+yP30−y (M = Cu, Zn) with 0 ≤ y ≤ 1. This causes the formation of Cu–Zn bonds in the framework, leading to a collapse of the orthorhombic superstructure into the more common cubic subcell of clathrate-I (Pmn). In the resulting cubic phases, each clathrate framework position is jointly occupied by three different elements: Cu, Zn, and P. Detailed structural characterization of the Ba–Cu–Zn–P clathrates-I via single crystal X-ray diffraction, joint synchrotron X-ray and neutron powder diffractions, pair distribution function analysis, electron diffraction and high-resolution electron microscopy, along with elemental analysis, indicates that local ordering is present in the cubic clathrate framework, suggesting the evolution of Cu–Zn bonds. For the compounds with the highest Zn content, a disorder–order transformation is detected due to the formation of another superstructure with trigonal symmetry and Cu–Zn bonds in the clathrate-I framework. It is shown that small changes in the composition, synthesis, and crystal structure have significant impacts on the structural and transport properties of Zn-substituted Ba8Cu16P30.
The phonon-glass electron-crystal (PGEC) idea suggests the decoupling of heat and charge transport using ordered frameworks and guest atoms with large displacement parameters: “rattlers”. Inorganic clathrates are PGEC materials. Their ordered covalent frameworks with large polyhedral cages can host guest cations that donate their valence electrons to the framework, providing an electron-balanced, semiconducting Zintl system, as required for thermoelectrics. This tetrahedral coordination is very suitable for tetrels, which are the group 14 elements (Si, Ge, and Sn). More than 200 tetrel clathrates have been discovered.2,3 Improvements in their thermoelectric properties have been realized by the partial replacement of tetrel framework atoms with transition metals.2–6 This prompted our search for new clathrates with high concentrations of transition metals in their frameworks.
Ba8Cu16P30 is one such clathrate, originally discovered in the 1990s by Mewis et al.7 It crystallizes in an orthorhombic Pbcn superstructure, where Ba atoms are encapsulated in Cu/P cages with segregated Cu and P sites. In 2003, the thermoelectric properties of Ba8Cu16P30 were characterized and a metallic dependence of the electrical resistivity was observed, indicating the necessity of altering the electronic properties to generate a semiconductor.8 We scrutinized a supposedly simple Zn substitution into the Cu sublattice, which proved to be extremely complex from structural and bonding points of view. In the present work, we report a comprehensive characterization of the crystal and electronic structures of the Zn-substituted Ba8Cu16P30 clathrate over its full substitution range, 0–35%, of the total metal content, Zn/(Cu + Zn).
All samples of Ba8Cu16−xZnxP30 were obtained from solid state reactions of the elements. Single phase samples of Ba8Cu16−xZnxP30 (0 < x < 3) were obtained from stoichiometric mixtures of elemental Ba, Cu, Zn, and P for x = 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 1.75, 2, 2.25, 2.5, and 3 with a total mass of 1 g of starting materials. Samples of x ≈ 4 (24.2% Zn/Mtotal) and x ≈ 5 (29.4% Zn/Mtotal, Mtotal = Zn + Cu) were synthesized using slightly P-deficient stoichiometries of Ba8Cu12.5Zn4P29.5 and Ba8Cu12Zn5P29, respectively. A sample of maximum Zn content (x = 5.6, 35% Zn/Mtotal) was synthesized using the Ba8Cu10.4Zn5.6P30 nominal composition. Samples were either placed in glassy-carbon crucibles inside silica ampoules or placed directly into carbonized silica ampoules. In both cases the ampoules were evacuated and flame-sealed. The ampoules were heated to 1173 K over 17 h, annealed at this temperature for 72 h, and then cooled to room temperature. The products were ground in the glovebox and re-annealed at 1173 K for 140 h, cooled down, reground in the glovebox and re-annealed under the same conditions for another 140 h.
The melting temperatures of all synthesized clathrates were determined using differential scanning calorimetry. To ensure homogeneity, all samples were subsequently heated above the melting temperature in two different ways. The samples with x < 1.5 (9.4% Zn/Mtotal) were heated to 1223 K over 5 hours, held there for 10 hours, and then allowed to cool to room temperature. Samples with intermediate Zn content, 1.5 < x < 2.5 (9.5–16% Zn/Mtotal), were heated to 1223 K over 5 hours, held there for 10 hours, and air-quenched by removing the ampoules from the furnace. Samples with high Zn content, x > 2.5 (>16% Zn/Mtotal), were heated to 1173 K over 5 hours, held there for 10 hours, and air-quenched by removing the ampoules from the furnace. This complex quenching procedure was developed as the result of multiple quenching and melting experiments in order to avoid or minimize impurity formation and significant losses of Zn due to vaporization.
Fig. 1 GGA-PBE density of states calculations are shown for orthorhombic Ba8Cu16P30 and one possible model of Ba8Cu14Zn2P30, where Zn solely occupies one crystallographic position, and Cu–Zn bonding is avoided. The density of states for Ba8Cu16P30 was reproduced by a second computational method, TB-LMTO-ASA, Fig. S2.† |
Based on Zintl counting, the replacement of two Cu atoms with Zn atoms (2 extra electrons, 12.5% Zn/Mtotal) in the Ba8Cu16P30 structure is expected to result in a charge-balanced compound with semiconducting properties. This prediction is supported by density of states calculations, which suggest that an additional 2 electrons per formula unit will move the Fermi level to the top of the valence band (Fig. 1, bottom). The maximum values of experimentally determined Seebeck coefficients over the range of measured compositions are reached for compositions with close to 2 Zn atoms (12.5% Zn/Mtotal) (Fig. 2, top).
According to the Zintl count and the calculated density of states, an increase in the Zn content of over two atoms per formula unit should result in the formation of an n-type material due to the relocation of the Fermi level into the conduction band. However, this is not the case. The Seebeck coefficients remain positive for all samples, irrespective of the Zn content.
By synergistically applying a number of characterization techniques, we determined that for samples with high Zn content, over 12.5% Zn/Mtotal, instead of forming the Ba8Cu16−xZnxP30 phase, a more complex phase, Ba8M16+yP30−y (M = Cu, Zn) (0 ≤ y ≤ 1), forms in which the P content is reduced below 30 atoms per formula unit. Considering the Zintl description, every replacement of P with Zn will lead to 3 fewer electrons. This suggests that the composition Ba8Cu11Zn6P29 should be electron balanced, 8 × 2 (Ba) + 11 × 1 (Cu) + 6 × 2 (Zn) + 29 × 5 (P) = 184 electrons, which is exactly 4 electrons per framework atom. We hypothesize that the P-deficient, M-rich phases ultimately result from the formation of Cu–Zn bonds in the structure. Since the avoidance of Cu–Cu interactions led to the realization of the orthorhombic supercell in Ba8Cu16P30,9 Cu–Zn bonds are more likely than the formation of Cu–Cu bonds.
Consequently, further addition of Zn atoms over 12.5% Zn/Mtotal not only led to P-deficient phases, but also triggered a structural conversion of the primary orthorhombic √2 × 1 × 2√2 Pbcn cell (a ≈ 14 Å, b ≈ 10 Å, c ≈ 28 Å, V ≈ 4000 Å3) into a cubic Pmn subcell (a ≈ 10 Å, V ≈ 1000 Å3). In this higher symmetry subcell, the previously segregated metal and phosphorus sites merge into mixed occupancy sites. Detailed structural investigation of the samples with high Zn content indicates that these compounds are not completely disordered, but are instead locally ordered, merely lacking complete long-range ordering.
Powdered single-phase samples of Zn-substituted Ba8Cu16P30 were compacted using spark plasma sintering. The resulting geometrical densities of the pellets were greater than 90% of their theoretical X-ray densities. Seebeck coefficients were measured for selected single-phase samples ranging from Ba8Cu16P30 to Ba8M16+yP30−y with 25% Zn/Mtotal (Fig. 2, top). In addition to these samples, selected samples of mixed orthorhombic and cubic structures (1.5 ≤ x < 3) were also measured. The Seebeck coefficients remained positive in the 5–400 K temperature range for all samples. The maximum Seebeck coefficient is observed around the expected semiconducting stoichiometry, Ba8Cu14Zn2P30, with a room temperature value of nearly 80 μV K−1.
In Fig. 2 (middle), the linear fits are plotted for Zn content versus volume per formula unit for cubic and orthorhombic crystals. The slopes of these lines are different. The rate of increase in volume with Zn content for orthorhombic systems is lower than that of the cubic systems. This is expected if only the Cu framework atoms are replaced with the larger Zn atoms in the orthorhombic systems, but both the Cu and the smaller P framework atoms are replaced by the larger Zn atoms above x ≈ 2 (≈12.5% Zn/Mtotal) in the cubic systems.
Fig. 4 Top: unit cells are shown for the orthorhombic cell (black) and the cubic subcell (gray shading). Bottom: polyhedral representations of the orthorhombic and cubic unit cells are shown with the two cage types. Barium atoms are shown in red, M atoms (M = Cu, Zn) are blue, and P atoms are yellow for the orthorhombic cell. In the cubic cell, 6c sites are shown in dark gray, 16i sites are purple, and 24k sites are green. See Fig. S1† for additional details. |
For the two samples with 31% Zn/Mtotal (nominal Zn = 5), a rhombohedral cell, Rc, was observed. The primitive part of the rhombohedral unit cell has an identical volume and number of atoms to the cubic cell. Reduction of the symmetry from cubic to rhombohedral resulted in the formation of two unique Ba crystallographic sites, four mixed M/P sites, and one fully occupied P site. The latter one forms a short P–P bond to itself (2.21 Å), which is too short for a M–P bond.18–22 This is not the first observation of a rhombohedral distortion in a clathrate-I system. In 2004, Cros et al. reported the existence of a Si–Te clathrate-I with R3c symmetry. In their case, three cubic Pmn positions split into six Si and two Te positions upon substitution of Te into the Si clathrate framework.23
Since all of the Ba8M16P30 and Ba8M16+yP30−y (M = Cu, Zn) compounds retain a common clathrate-I structure, the Ba atoms in the small pentagonal dodecahedra coordinate to 20 framework atoms, and those in the larger tetrakaidecahedra coordinate to 24 framework atoms. A significant increase in the shortest Ba-framework distance is seen for the higher Zn content systems (Table S4†). The shortest Ba-framework (Ba–P) distances for the orthorhombic clathrates are 3.16–3.17 Å. This distance increases substantially to 3.21–3.24 Å in the cubic/rhombohedral systems, and at the highest Zn content, Ba vacancies are formed. Similar vacancy formation in a guest site was seen in the cationic Si–P–Te clathrates where the guest Te atoms preferentially vacate cages with the highest concentration of P.24,25
The shortest Ba–Ba distances also increase from a range of 4.83–4.84 Å in the orthorhombic systems to 5.00–5.03 Å in the cubic systems. These distances are similar to the ones found in other Ba-containing Zintl phases.26,27 Selected bond distances and angles are shown in Table S4.† The orthorhombic-to-cubic conversion also affects P–P bonding. An extra-long P–P distance that is present in the orthorhombic structures remains almost unchanged with Zn substitution: in Ba8Cu16P30 and Ba8Cu14.4Zn1.6P30 the distances are 2.477(2) Å and 2.470(2) Å, respectively. For the cubic phase with x close to 2, there is a large drop in the longest framework–framework distance down to 2.401(3) Å between two atoms in the 24k site.
With the increase of Zn content, the amount of metal does not increase equally in all cubic framework sites. As shown in Fig. 5, at the expected semiconducting composition of ∼2 Zn (12.5% Zn/Mtotal), the metal (M = Cu, Zn) atoms show a preference for the 24k site (black circles), where nearly half of the sites are occupied by M atoms. In contrast, smaller P atoms preferentially fill up the 16i site (red triangles) which has the lowest M occupancy. A steady decrease in the M occupancy of the 16i sites can be seen along with an equally steady increase in the M occupancy of the 24k sites with increasing Zn content. The M occupancies of the 6c sites remain nearly constant across all cubic samples. Overall, the longest average bond distances are of the 24k–24k type, and the smallest average bond distances are of 16i–16i type, in accordance with the lowest and highest M occupancies in the 16i and 24k sites, respectively.
This preferential distribution of the M and P atoms suggests the possibility of Cu/Zn ordering. For example, in the crystal structure of the cubic clathrate Ba8Cu4Si42, Cu was found to substitute for Si only in one framework site.28 Neutron diffraction was employed to determine any site preferences for the metal atoms in the Ba8M16P30 system.
For the orthorhombic compound of nominal Zn = 1, free refinement of Zn in every Cu atomic position resulted in the composition Ba8Cu15.1Zn0.9(2)P30. Instead of having Zn in every site, Zn showed a strong preference for only few specific sites (Table S6†). Zn is consistently found in three sites, Cu1, Cu4, and Cu5. The highest Zn concentration is found in the Cu1 and Cu4 sites with the shortest Ba–M distances, and the shortest (Cu1) and third shortest (Cu4) M–P bonds. Thus, there is more at play than just atomic sizes. Ba–M bonding interactions have been observed in clathrate-I systems, i.e. Ba8Au5.3Ge40.7,4 and without further calculations cannot be ruled out as a possibility in Ba–Cu–Zn–P clathrates. Note that the orthorhombic Cu1 and Cu4 sites are derived from the 16i sites in a cubic unit cell.
A joint unconstrained refinement of the cubic sample was unstable, so the refinement was performed using the constrained composition of Ba8Cu13.1Zn3.3P29.6, determined from elemental analysis and a single crystal X-ray refinement. This refinement indicated that Zn atoms substitute into all three framework positions of the cubic Ba8Cu13.1Zn3.3P29.6 structure. The Cu/Zn ratios were determined to be 2:1, 2:1, and 6:1 for the 6c, 16i, and 24k cubic sites, respectively. Zn prefers to occupy the 6c and 16i sites, representing almost a third of the metal content in each site, while Cu occupancy dominates in the 24k site where the Zn content is minimal.
The relative intensities of the extra peaks increase as the Zn content increases, indicating that stronger superstructural ordering is induced by the addition of more Zn. The peaks can be indexed in a primitive trigonal unit cell with a ≈ 14.2 Å and c ≈ 17.4 Å, which is related to the unit cell parameters of the rhombohedral phase mentioned earlier (Fig. 6c). The presence of (100), (301), (310), and (313) peaks indicates that the superstructure does not order rhombohedrally, but instead orders in a primitive trigonal symmetry of the P3 family, i.e. P3, P, P321, P312, P3m1, Pm1, P31m, or P1m. Significant time was spent developing a primitive trigonal model for these systems, but none could be refined lower than R1 = 0.12, due to the weak intensities of the superstructural reflections. The appearance of superstructural ordering indicates that the Ba–Cu–Zn–P clathrate-I system has a preferential distribution of M and P atoms over specific atomic sites, and it is less favorable for the structure to form with a completely mixed occupancy of Cu, Zn, and P in each framework site. To shed more light on this extra ordering we performed local structure analysis using TEM and PDF analyses.
Weak reflections, including (100), were reproducibly found in the ED patterns of the trigonal crystallites. These extra reflections may be due to double diffraction, but the presence of extra peaks in the synchrotron X-ray diffraction patterns suggests that additional ordering is present. Based on these results, the sample that looked to be single phase via in-house powder X-ray diffraction appears to instead be a mixture of crystallites that are either highly ordered or only partially-ordered. Contrary to what was observed in the clathrate-I Ba8Au16P30,26 no intergrowths or macroscopic defects were seen in crystals of Ba8M16+yP30−y. Fig. 8 and S4† show HAADF-STEM and ABF-STEM images of the Ba8Cu13.1Zn3.3P29.6 structure viewed along two main zone axes of the cubic and trigonal structures. The obtained Fourier transformed (FT) diffraction patterns are in good agreement with the observed ED patterns, and they confirm the difference between the two structures, showing superstructure spots. No structural defects, such as antiphase boundaries or stacking faults, were observed for either type of crystallite. The small difference in the atomic arrangements of the trigonal structure from the cubic structure is visible upon a comparative analysis of the Cu–P fragments in the [−111]cub and [001]hex images (Fig. 8c and d). The indicated Cu–P chains are distorted and tilted left and right in the trigonal structure while they are linear in the cubic structure. In the case of the [001]cub and the corresponding [100]hex images (Fig. 8e–j), differences between the two structures occur in the intensities of the Ba columns resulting in the appearance of a superstructure. TEM studies clearly indicate that additional ordering in the “cubic” structure is occurring.
Short-range (1.9 Å ≤ r ≤ 9.9 Å) and long-range (9.9 Å ≤ r ≤ 29.9 Å) PDF patterns were fit independently. The short-range data for the Ba8Cu13.1Zn3.3P29.6 cannot be satisfactorily fit with the cubic model, indicating that the local structure is more complex than the simple cubic model. Since no structural model is available for the trigonal ordering, we used the fully ordered orthorhombic model, which fits the short-range data much better than the cubic model for both the neutron and X-ray datasets (Fig. 9). In the longer range, 9.9 Å ≤ r ≤ 29.9 Å, there is a less obvious improvement of the fit when the data is refined in an orthorhombic model versus a cubic model. Similar results were obtained for the cubic samples with different Zn content.
Although refinements using the orthorhombic model may have overparameterization issues, they indicate that the cubic phases do not have completely disordered M/P sites, and that they cannot be well-described by a simple cubic structural model. PDF analyses clearly show that, on the local scale, the cubic structure is additionally ordered and consists of locally-ordered domains which are disordered with respect to one another. According to TEM and XRD those domains have a trigonal structure.
We recently showed that at a higher Cu:Zn ratio of 1:1, the clathrate-I structure is unstable, and a new clathrate type, Ba8Cu13Zn11P28+δ, is formed with a different clathrate-like framework.29 Despite having a different framework structure, the Ba8Cu13Zn11P28+δ clathrate shares many similarities with the proposed trigonal superstructure for the clathrate-I samples with the highest Zn content, namely, segregation of M and P atoms over different framework positions and the formation of Cu–Zn bonds in the clathrate framework.
The clathrate framework evolves to maintain a better charge balance than that which is obtained from the Ba8M16P30 (M = Cu, Zn) model, allowing excess metal above the semiconducting Ba8Cu14Zn2P30 regime. Electron-deficiency is maintained by additional substitutions of Zn for P atoms. Further complexity is observed in the samples with high Zn content that were studied using synchrotron X-ray diffraction, PDF analyses, and TEM. These samples demonstrated the partial segregation of metal and P atoms and the formation of an ordered superstructure, possibly with Cu–Zn bonds, in the clathrate framework.
Overall, our results suggest that complete or partial ordering of small domains is preferred in the Ba8M16+yP30−y (M = Cu, Zn) system. Further investigation of the high-temperature thermoelectric properties of these compounds is currently underway.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Experimental details, tables of crystal structure refinements and structural parameters and associated CIFs, synchrotron X-ray and neutron powder diffraction Rietveld refinement plots, additional TEM and elemental analysis figures, LMTO DOS and band structure diagrams. See DOI: 10.1039/c7sc00354d |
‡ Present address: Thermal Energy Conversion Technologies Group, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California 91109, USA. |
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