posted on 2017-12-05, 00:00authored byYuhang Jing, Hiroshige Matsumoto, Narayana R. Aluru
Some of the solid
oxide materials, used in solid oxide fuel and
electrolysis cells, are known to conduct protons once they are hydrated.
However, the mechanisms by which solid oxide materials get hydrated
is not clear. By performing detailed density functional theory calculations,
we investigate hydration of two typical solid oxides with a single-crystal
structurea proton-conducting yttrium-doped strontium zirconate
(SZY) and an oxide ion-conducting yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ).
We suggest a four-step process to understand the hydration of solid
oxideswater adsorption on the surface, proton migration from
the surface to bulk, proton migration in the bulk, and oxide ion vacancy
migration in the bulk. The hydroxide ion migration with a lower energy
barrier, compared to the proton hopping mechanism, is proposed for
the conduction of proton between the surface and subsurface of the
perovskite oxide. Our analysis provides mechanistic insights into
the hydration of single-crystal SZY and nonhydration of single-crystal
YSZ. The study presented here not only explains the hydration of materials
but also provides the importance of structural rearrangement when
a proton is incorporated into the bulk of the solid oxide material.