Transcript
Page 1: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

[email protected] http://folk.uio.no/trulsn

Department of ChemistryUniversity of Oslo

Centre for Materials Science and Nanotechnology (SMN)

FERMIOOslo Research Park (Forskningsparken)

Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Truls Norby

Page 2: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Brief history of structure, stoichiometry, and defects

• Early chemistry had no concept of stoichiometry or structure.

• The finding that compounds generally contained elements in ratios of small integer numbers was a great breakthrough!

• Understanding that external geometry often reflected atomic structure.

• Perfectness ruled. Non-stoichiometry was out.

• Intermetallic compounds forced re-acceptance of non-stoichiometry.

• But real understanding of defect chemistry of compounds is less than 100 years old.

Page 3: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Perfect structure

• Our course in defects takes the perfect structure as starting point.

• This can be seen as the ideally defect-free interior of a single crystal or large crystallite grain at 0 K.

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Close-packing

• Metallic or ionic compounds can often be regarded as a close-packing of spheres

• In ionic compounds, this is most often a close-packing of anions (and sometimes large cations) with the smaller cations in interstices

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Some simple classes of oxide structures with close-packed oxide ion sublattices

Formula Cation:anion coordination

Type and number of occupied interstices

fcc of anions hcp of anions

MO 6:6 1/1 of octahedral sites

NaCl, MgO, CaO, CoO, NiO, FeO a.o.

FeS, NiS

MO 4:4 1/2 of tetrahedral sites

Zinc blende: ZnS Wurtzite: ZnS, BeO, ZnO

M2O 8:4 1/1 of tetrahedral sites occupied

Anti-fluorite: Li2O, Na2O a.o.

M2O3, ABO3 6:4 2/3 of octahedral sites

Corundum:Al2O3, Fe2O3,Cr2O3 a.o.Ilmenite: FeTiO3

MO2 6:3 ½ of octahedral sites

Rutile: TiO2, SnO2

AB2O4 1/8 of tetrahedral and 1/2 of octahedral sites

Spinel: MgAl2O4Inverse spinel: Fe3O4

Page 6: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

The perovskite structure ABX3

• Close-packing of large A and X

• Small B in octahedral interstices

• Alternative (and misleading?) representation

Page 7: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

We shall use 2-dimensional structures for our schematic representations of defects

• Elemental solid

• Ionic compound

Page 8: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Defects in an elemental solid

From A. Almar-Næss: Metalliske materialer.

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Defects in an ionic compound

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Defect classes

• Electrons (conduction band) and electron holes (valence band)

• 0-dimensional defects– point defects– defect clusters– valence defects (localised electronic defects)

• 1-dimensional defects– Dislocations

• 2-dimensional defects– Defect planes– Grain boundaries (often row of dislocations)

• 3-dimensional defects– Secondary phase

Page 11: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Perfect vs defective structure

• Perfect structure (ideally exists only at 0 K)• No mass transport or ionic conductivity• No electronic conductivity in ionic materials

and semiconductors;

• Defects introduce mass transport and electronic transport; diffusion, conductivity…

• New electrical, optical, magnetic, mechanical properties

• Defect-dependent properties

Page 12: Defect chemistry – a general introduction
Page 13: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Point defects – intrinsic disorder

• Point defects (instrinsic disorder) form spontaneously at T > 0 K

– Caused by Gibbs energy gain as a result of increased entropy

– Equilibrium is a result of the balance between entropy gain and enthalpy cost

• 1- and 2-dimensional defects do not form spontaneously

– Entropy not high enough.– Single crystal is the ultimate

equilibrium state of all crystalline materials

• Polycrystalline, deformed, impure/doped materials is a result of extrinsic action

Page 14: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Defect formation and equilibrium

Free energy vs number n of defects

Hn = nHSn = nSvib + Sconf

G = nH - TnSvib - TSconf

For n vacancies in an elemental solid:

EE = EE + vE K = [vE] = n/(N+n)

Sconf = k lnP = k ln[(N+n)!/(N!n!)]

For large x: Stirling: lnx! xlnx - x

Equilibrium at dG/dn = 0= H - TSvib - kT ln[(N+n)/n] = 0

n/(N+n) = K = exp(Svib/k - H/kT)

Page 15: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Kröger-Vink notation for 0-dimensional defects

• Point defects– Vacancies– Interstitials– Substitutional defects

• Electronic defects– Delocalised

• electrons• electron holes

– Valence defects• Trapped electrons • Trapped holes

• Cluster/associated defects

csA

• Kröger-Vink-notation

A = chemical species or v (vacancy)

s = site; lattice position or i (interstitial)

c = chargeEffective charge = Real charge on site

minus charge site would have in perfect lattice

Notation for effective charge:• positive/ negativex neutral (optional)

Page 16: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Perfect lattice of MX, e.g. ZnO

xZnZn

2ZnZn

-2OOxOO

ivxiv

Page 17: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Vacancies and interstitials

iZn

//Znv

Ov

//iO

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Electronic defects

/ZnZn

/e

hZnZnOO

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Foreign species

ZnGa

/ZnAg

/ONOF

iLi

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Protons and other hydrogen defects

H+ H H-

OOH

iH

O(OH)

/iOH

OH

xiH

xMO2(2(OH))

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How can we apply integer charges when the material is not fully ionic?

Ov

Page 22: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

The extension of the effective charge may be larger than the defect itself

)v(4M OM

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……much larger….

)v4O(4M OOM

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…but when it moves, an integer number of electrons also move, thus making the use of the simple defect and integer charges reasonable

)v4O(4M OOM

O v

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Defects are donors and acceptors

E

xOv

Ov Ov

Ec

Ev

ZnGa

/ZnAg

//Znv/

ZnvxZnv

iH

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Defect chemical reactions

Example: Formation of cation Frenkel defect pair:

Defect chemical reactions must obey three rules:

• Mass balance: Conservation of mass

• Charge balance: Conservation of charge

• Site ratio balance: Conservation of host structure

i//Zn

xi

xZn ZnvvZn

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Defect chemical reactions obey the mass action law

Example: Formation of cation Frenkel defect pair:

i//Zn

xi

xZn ZnvvZn

]][Zn[v]][v[Zn]][Zn[v

[i]][v

[Zn]][Zn

[i]][Zn

[Zn]][v

i//Znx

ixZn

i//Zn

xi

xZn

i//Zn

//

xi

xZn

iZn

vZn

ZnvF aa

aaK

RTH

RΔS

RTΔG

aa

aaK vib

vZn

ZnvF

xi

xZn

iZn

000

i//Zn

Δexpexpexp]][Zn[v//

Page 28: Defect chemistry – a general introduction

Notes on mass action law

• The standard state is that the site fraction of the defect is 1

• Standard entropy and enthalpy changes refer to full site occupancies. This is an unrealisable situation.

• Ideally diluted solutions often assumed

• Note: The standard entropy change is a change in the vibrational entropy – not the configurational.

RTH

RΔS

RTΔG

aa

aaK vib

vZn

ZnvF

xi

xZn

iZn

000

i//Zn

Δexpexpexp]][Zn[v//

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Electroneutrality

• The numbers or concentrations of positive and negative charges cancel, e.g.

• Often employ simplified, limiting electroneutrality condition:

Note: The electroneutrality is a mathematical expression, not a chemical reaction. The coefficients thus don’t say how many you get, but how much each “weighs” in terms of charge….

][Zn][vor ]2[Zn]2[v i//Zni

//Zn

][h][OH][Ga][v2]2[Zn][e][N][Ag][O2]2[v OZnOi//

O/Zn

//i

//Zn

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Site balances

• Expresses that more than one species fight over the same site:

• Also this is a mathematical expression, not a chemical reaction.

) in ZnO 1 ( [O]][OH][v][O OOxO

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Defect structure; Defect concentrations

• The defect concentrations can now be found by combining

– Electroneutrality

– Mass and site balances

– Equilibrium mass action coefficients

• Two defects (limiting case) and subsequently for minority defects

– Brouwer diagrams

• or three or more defects simultaneously

– More exact solutions

• …these are the themes for the subsequent lectures and exercises…


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