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New insights into the structure, chemistry, and properties of Cu₄SnS₄

Version 2 2024-06-13, 10:51
Version 1 2017-07-21, 15:43
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 10:51 authored by A Choudhury, S Mohapatra, H Yaghoobnejad Asl, SH Lee, YS Hor, JE Medvedeva, DL McClane, GE Hilmas, MA McGuire, AF May, H Wang, S Dash, A Welton, P Boolchand, KP Devlin, J Aitken, R Herbst-Irmer, V Petříček
The ambient temperature structure of Cu4SnS4 has been revisited and the recently reported low temperature structure has been confirmed from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. A structural phase transition from a large monoclinic unit cell at low temperature to a smaller orthorhombic unit cell at high temperature has been observed. The room temperature phase exhibited disorder in the two copper sites, which is a different finding from earlier reports. The low temperature monoclinic form crystallizes in P21/c space group, which is isostructural with Cu4GeS4. The phase transition has also been studied with variable temperature powder Xray diffraction and 119Sn Mössbauer spectroscopy. The Seebeck coefficients and electrical resistivity of polycrystalline Cu4SnS4 are reported from 16 to 400 K on hot pressed pellets. Thermal conductivity measurements at high temperatures, 350 – 750 K exhibited very low thermal conductivities in the range 0.28 – 0.35 W K–1 m–1 . In all the transport measurements the phase transition has been observed at around 232 K. Resistivity decreases, while Seebeck coefficient increases after the phase transition during warming up from low to high temperatures. This change in resistivity has been correlated with the results of first-principles electronic band structure calculations using highly-accurate screened-exchange local density approximation. It was found that both the low hole effective mass of 0.63 me for the Γ→Y crystallographic direction and small band gap, 0.49 eV, are likely to contribute to the observed higher conductivity of the orthorhombic phase. Cu4SnS4 is also electrochemically active and shows reversible reaction with lithium between 1.7 and 3.5 volts.

History

Journal

Journal of solid state chemistry

Volume

253

Article number

C

Pagination

192-201

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0022-4596

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, Elseiver

Publisher

Elsevier