Tune the oxygen storage properties of Ca2MnAlO5+δthrough chemical doping
09573114 · 2017-02-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C01P2002/76
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C01G45/1221
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J20/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
An oxygen storage material including a compound of the formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 00.5 wherein the compound includes at least one dopant said dopant selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature or an oxygen storage temperature is modified in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
Claims
1. An oxygen storage material comprising: a compound of the formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 00.5 wherein the compound includes at least one dopant said dopant selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature or an oxygen storage temperature is modified in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
2. The oxygen storage material of claim 1 wherein the dopant is present in an amount of from 6 to 13 molar percent.
3. The oxygen storage material of claim 1 wherein the alkaline earth ions are selected from Mg, Sr and Ba.
4. The oxygen storage material of claim 3 wherein the alkaline earth ion is Mg and the release temperature is increased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
5. The oxygen storage material of claim 3 wherein the alkaline earth ion is Sr or Ba and the release temperature is decreased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
6. The oxygen storage material of claim 1 wherein the trivalent ions are selected from Ga, Sc, and Y.
7. The oxygen storage material of claim 6 wherein the trivalent ion is Ga and the release temperature is increased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
8. The oxygen storage material of claim 6 wherein the trivalent ion is Sc or Y and the release temperature is decreased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
9. The oxygen storage material of claim 1 wherein the 3d transition metal ions are selected from Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co and Ni.
10. The oxygen storage material of claim 9 wherein the 3d transition metal ion is Fe or Co or Ni and the release temperature is decreased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
11. The oxygen storage material of claim 9 wherein the 3d transition metal ion is Ti or V and the release temperature is increased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
12. The oxygen storage material of claim 1 wherein the at least one dopant includes two dopants.
13. The oxygen storage material of claim 12 wherein the two dopants are doped at differing sites of the Ca, Mn and Al sites.
14. An oxygen storage material comprising: a compound of the formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 00.5 wherein the compound includes at least one dopant said dopant selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature is increased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
15. The oxygen storage material of claim 14 wherein the at least one dopant is selected from the group wherein the 3d transition metal ion is Ti or V, the trivalent ion is Ga, and the alkaline earth ion is Mg.
16. An oxygen storage material comprising: a compound of the formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 00.5 wherein the compound includes at least one dopant said dopant selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature is decreased in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
17. The oxygen storage material of claim 16 wherein the at least one dopant is selected from the group wherein the 3d transition metal ion is the 3d transition metal ion is Fe or Co or Ni, the trivalent ion is Sc or Y, and the alkaline earth ion is Sr or Ba.
18. An oxygen storage material comprising: a compound of the formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 00.5 wherein the compound includes two dopants said dopants selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature or an oxygen storage temperature is modified in comparison to an un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ material.
19. The oxygen storage material of claim 18 wherein the alkaline earth ions are selected from Mg, Sr and Ba.
20. The oxygen storage material of claim 18 wherein the trivalent ions are selected from Ga, Sc, and Y.
21. The oxygen storage material of claim 18 wherein the 3d transition metal ions are selected from Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co and Ni.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(10) Many transition metal oxides may change oxygen stoichiometry with the variation of temperature or oxygen partial pressure. This property leads to the concept of oxygen storage materials (OSM), where large amounts of oxygen can be reversibly stored and released. OSMs have great potential in applications such as three-way catalysts and regulating oxygen pressures for the exact control of redox reactions. In these applications, an efficient OSM should have large oxygen storage capacity, fast release/storage rate, and good stability against thermal or chemical decomposition. Another property that affects the application of OSM is the temperature and pressure for the transition between oxygen rich and poor phases, which aligns with the fluctuation of the targeted chemical reactions. As illustrated in
(11) Again referring to
(12) Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5+ is capable of releasing oxygen even under oxygen-rich atmospheres with high sensitivity to small variation of temperatures. These characteristic features allow the use of Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5+ in oxygen-storage technologies. However, Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5+ intakes and releases oxygen only in a narrow temperature range between 500 and 700 C., which would limit its application in reactions outside of this temperature window.
(13) In one aspect, chemical doping may be utilized to tune the properties of functional materials. In one aspect, isoelectronic doping which includes divalent alkaline earth ions doping at Ca site, trivalent Ga.sup.3+, Sc.sup.3+ and Y.sup.3+ ions doping at Al site, and 3d transition metal ions doping at Mn site may be utilized to tune the oxygen storage properties of Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5+.
(14) In one aspect, there is disclosed an oxygen storage material including a compound of the formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 00.5 wherein the compound includes at least one dopant said dopant selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature or an oxygen storage temperature is modified in comparison to an un-doped Ca2MnAlO5.sub.+ material.
(15) Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5 crystalizes in a Brownmillerite structure, a defect perovskite with ordered oxygen vacancies. The larger Ca ion is located at the perovskite A site, while smaller Mn and Al ions occupy the perovskite B site and stack alternately, resulting in a MnO.sub.6CaAlO.sub.4 layered staking as illustrated in
(16) The calculation of the enthalpy and free energy of an oxygen release reaction may be presented as follows:
MO.sub.5.5.fwdarw.MO.sub.5+0.25O.sub.2 (1)
(17) where MO.sub.5 represents the chemically doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5 and MO.sub.5.5 represents Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5. The temperature-dependent Gibbs free energy of reaction 1 is
G=(H.sub.MO.sub.
(18) Because the volume change in the solid component is small relative to the volume change associated with releasing gaseous O.sub.2, PV contribution due to changes in the volumes of the solid phases can be neglected. The free energy of O.sub.2 gas is related to the temperature and pressure as
G.sub.O.sub.
(19) Applying a correction for the binding energy of O.sub.2, the reaction enthalpy at 300 K is
H.sub.300E.sub.MO.sub.
(20) At temperature T, the enthalpy is obtained as
H(T)=H.sub.300+0.25H.sub.O.sub.
(21) The Gibbs free energy becomes
G(T)=H(T)T(S.sub.MO.sub.
(22) Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5 crystalizes in space group Ibm2, while Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 crystalizes in space group Imma. These structures are used as the initial structure models in DFT relaxations. The structure of Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 contains half-occupied Al_T.sub.d and oxygen sites. We first estimate the electrostatic energy for all possible occupancies in a unit cell by assigning formal charges (Ca: +2; Mn: 4+; Al: +3; O: 2) in the Ewald summation, and perform DFT calculations for the structure with lowest electrostatic energy.
(23) DFT calculations were performed using the Vienna ab initio Simulation Package (VASP) with projector augmented waves (PAW) pseudo potentials and the exchange-correlation functional parameterized by Perdew, Burke, and Ernzerhof for the generalized gradient approximation (GGA). To describe the d-part of the Hamiltonian using GGA+U method for 3d transition metal ions a Hubbard type potential was introduced, with the U parameter optimized in reference. A cutoff energy of 500 eV was used with 626 Gamma centered k-point mesh for the unit cell of O.sub.5 phase, and 616 for the unit cell of O.sub.5.5 phase. With these settings the numerical convergence was ensured to less than 2 meV per formula unit. In all calculations the relaxation was first performed on the ionic positions and the unit cell size, followed by a self-consistent calculation to obtain the final energy.
(24) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Lattice parameters of Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5+ ( = 0 and 0.5) Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5 Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 DFT exp DFT exp a () 5.601 5.469 5.291 5.286 b () 15.007 15.003 29.696 29.533 c () 5.337 5.243 5.451 5.403 V (.sup.3) 448.6 430.1 856.6 843.4
(25) Oxygen storage in Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5 Table 1 lists the DFT optimized lattice parameters for Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5 and Ca.sub.2AlMnO.sub.5.5. The unit cell volume is overestimated by 1-4%, which is a common trend for GGA-based calculations.
(26) The reaction enthalpy is 0.417 eV per formula unit (+40.2 kJ/mol) for the reaction
Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5.fwdarw.Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+0.250.sub.2 (11)
(27) With this enthalpy value, the temperature for the equilibrium between O.sub.5 and O.sub.5.5 phase is calculated to be 848 K at 1 atm O.sub.2 pressure, while various available measurements showed an average value around 878 K. This remarkable agreement verifies DFT calculations used in the study of oxygen storage materials.
(28) In one aspect, the DFT calculations are provided for isovalent doping at Ca, Mn and Al sites. These include the doping of alkaline earth ions (Mg, Sr, Ba) at Ca site, doping of trivalent ions (Ga, Sc and Y) at Al site, and doping of 3d transition metal (Ti to Ni) at Mn site. Table 2 lists the calculated reaction enthalpy and the transition temperature at 1 atm O.sub.2 partial pressure.
(29) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Reaction enthalpy (H.sub.300, eV) and transition temperature at 1 atm O.sub.2 partial pressure (T.sub.c, Kelvin) for chemical doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+. doping site element H.sub.300 T.sub.c original / 0.417 848 Ca Mg 0.468 964 Sr 0.407 827 Ba 0.324 641 Ga 0.465 958 Al Sc 0.354 708 Y 0.325 644 Mn Ti 0.544 1121 V 0.530 1103 Cr 0.420 854 Fe 0.387 781 Co 0.364 729 Ni 0.242 463
(30) Alkaline earth ions doping at Ca site. The unit cell of Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 contains two symmetrically distinct Ca sites, which are distinguished by their distances to Al_O.sub.h and Al_T.sub.d layers. DFT calculations reveal that the replacement of Ca with larger Sr or Ba preferably happens at CaO.sub.h site. The doping of Sr and Ba at Ca_T.sub.d site is energetically unstable by 0.81 and 1.23 eV, respectively. On the contrary, doping of Mg is more stable at Ca_T.sub.d site, while the energy of the configuration with Mg at Ca_O.sub.h site is 0.82 eV higher.
(31) It can be seen from Table 2 that the size of the dopant at Ca site also greatly affects the reaction enthalpy. Doping large alkaline earth ions leads to decrease in the reaction enthalpy thus providing a lower transition temperature. The lattice expansion caused by the replacement of Ca with larger alkaline earth ions weakens the oxygen bonding strength; therefore the release of oxygen is energetically easier for a larger dopant. To quantitatively illustrate this trend, in
(32) Referring to
(33) Trivalent ions doping at Al site. The unit cell of Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 contains two symmetry distinct Al sites bonded in octahedral and tetrahedral environment. DFT calculations showed that the doping of Ga at Al_O.sub.h site is more stable by 0.13 eV, which implies the preference of Ga to stay with octahedral bonding. As a consequence of this site preference, the replacement of Al by Ga destabilizes the reduced phase, in which the doped Ga has to stay at tetrahedral environment. The reaction enthalpy is increased by 0.10 eV and the transition temperature is increased by 110 K.
(34) The doping of even larger trivalent Sc and Y is also presented. The ionic sizes of Sc.sup.3+ (0.87 ) and Y.sup.3+ (0.90 ) are 63% and 68% larger than that of Al.sup.3+ (0.535 ). The large size mismatch destabilizes the doped compound, especially for the oxidized O.sub.5.5 phase, whose unit cell size is smaller than the reduced O.sub.5 phase. As a result, the doping of Sc and Y lowers the transition temperature by approximately 140 and 204 K, respectively.
(35) Referring to
(36) 3d transition metal doping at Mn site. The release of oxygen from Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 requires the distribution of one extra electron on the lattice. The function of Mn is to provide an active redox center that tunes the valence to balance the charge transfer. Therefore the redox potential of the transition metal ions directly affects the reaction enthalpy. In Table 2, the reaction enthalpy generally decreases from early 3d transition metals (Ti and V) to late transition metals (Co and Ni). Compared to the un-doped Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+, the doping of 12.5% of Ti and V increases the transition temperature by approximately 273 and 255 K, respectively. On the contrary, the doping of 12.5% of Fe, Co and Ni decreases the transition temperature by approximately 67, 119, 205 K, respectively.
(37) The stability of oxygen vacancy in transition metal doped compounds may be affected by the degree of covalency of transition metal-oxygen bond. Oxygen ions are easy to remove when the electrons are less localized in a relatively more covalent bond. However, the oxygen ions released from Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 does not bond directly to the transition metal ions. Therefore it is the transition metal redox potential instead of the transition metal-oxygen bond strength that directly affects the oxygen vacancy stability. The release of oxygen may be described as the cleavage of the bonding of the target oxygen ions and concurrent formal reduction of the transition metal ions from transition metal.sup.4+ to transition metal.sup.3+. The reaction enthalpy of these processes can be correlated to the transition metal cation reduction exothermicities. Transition metal.sup.3+ ionization potentials nicely correlate the computed reaction enthalpy as shown in
(38) Referring to
(39) The property for oxygen release in Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5.5 is well correlated to the p-band position of released oxygen.
(40) In another aspect an oxygen storage material may have formula: Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ wherein 0<0.5 wherein the compound includes two dopants said dopants selected from alkaline earth ions at the Ca site, trivalent ions at the Al site, and 3d transition metal ions at the Mn site wherein the an oxygen release temperature or an oxygen storage temperature is modified in comparison to an un-doped Ca2MnAlO5.sub.+ material.
(41) The two dopants may exhibit a similar effect on the release temperature of the material. For example, as described above with reference to the various dopants Ba and Fe both demonstrate the ability to lower the transition temperature. Similarly both Ti and Ga demonstrate the ability to increase the transition temperature. Reaction enthalpy (H.sub.300, eV) and transition temperature at 1 atm O.sub.2 partial pressure (T.sub.c, Kelvin) for Ca.sub.2MnAlO.sub.5+ co-doped with two elements are provided in Table 3.
(42) The co-doping of Ba and Fe further lowers the reaction enthalpy as well as the transition T, and the co-doping of Ti/Ga further increases the enthalpy and transition temperature. However, it is also noticed that the enthalpy change caused by the co-doping is slightly less than the sum of the enthalpy change caused by the doping of the single elements as was presented above.
(43) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 element 1 element 2 H.sub.300 T.sub.c Ba Fe .314 618 Ga Ti .554 1131
(44) The invention is not restricted to the illustrative examples described above. Examples described are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Changes therein, other combinations of elements, and other uses will occur to those skilled in the art. The scope of the invention is defined by the scope of the claims.