Sequential pairwise reactions dictate phase evolution in the solid-state synthesis of multicomponent ceramics
Preprint 2020 en
Authors
AM
Akira Miura
CB
Christopher J. Bartel
YG
Yusuke Goto
Abstract
1 min read
Solid-state synthesis from powder precursors is the primary processing route to advanced multicomponent ceramic materials. Optimizing ceramic synthesis routes is usually a laborious, trial-and-error process, as heterogeneous mixtures of powder precursors often evolve through a complicated series of reaction intermediates. Here, we show that phase evolution from multiple precursors can be modeled as a sequence of interfacial reactions which initiate between two phases at a time. By using ab initio thermodynamics to calculate which pairwise interface is most reactive, we can understand and anticipate which non-equilibrium phases will form during solid-state synthesis. Using the classic high-temperature superconductor YBa$_2$Cu$_3$O$_{6+x}$ (YBCO) as a model system, we directly observe these sequential pairwise reactions with in situ X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy. Our model rationalizes a remarkable observation--that YBCO can be synthesized in 30 minutes when starting with a BaO$_2$ precursor, as opposed to 12+ hours with the traditional BaCO$_3$ precursor.
Matthew J. McDermott, Brennan C. McBride, C. Regier, Gia Thinh Tran, Yu Chen, Adam A. Corrao, Max C. Gallant, Gabrielle E. Kamm, Christopher J. Bartel, Karena W. Chapman, Peter G. Khalifah, Gerbrand Ceder, James R. Neilson, Kristin A. Persson
Matthew J. McDermott, Brennan C. McBride, C. Regier, Gia Thinh Tran, Yu Chen, Adam A. Corrao, Max C. Gallant, Gabrielle E. Kamm, Christopher J. Bartel, Karena W. Chapman, Peter G. Khalifah, Gerbrand Ceder, James R. Neilson, Kristin A. Persson
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