Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second edition
- Preface to the first edition
- 1 Structure of solids: old and new facets
- 2 New and improved methods of characterization
- 3 Preparative strategies
- 4 Phase transitions
- 5 New light on an old problem: defects and nonstoichiometry
- 6 Structure-property relations
- 7 Fashioning solids for specific purposes: aspects of materials design
- 8 Reactivity of solids
- Index
5 - New light on an old problem: defects and nonstoichiometry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface to the second edition
- Preface to the first edition
- 1 Structure of solids: old and new facets
- 2 New and improved methods of characterization
- 3 Preparative strategies
- 4 Phase transitions
- 5 New light on an old problem: defects and nonstoichiometry
- 6 Structure-property relations
- 7 Fashioning solids for specific purposes: aspects of materials design
- 8 Reactivity of solids
- Index
Summary
Introduction
That compounds have definite compositions is taken as a matter of faith and yet there are several inorganic solids which exhibit a wide range of compositions or show no simple correspondence between the composition and the detailed structure (or chemical identity). It has been known since the 1920s that stoichiometric FeO1.00 does not fall in the stability range of iron (II) oxide (FeO1.05–FeO1.15). Point defects in crystals such as vacancies and interstitials first described by Schottky, Frenkel and Wagner account for the transport properties of ionic solids, but there are serious difficulties in applying the point-defect formalism to solids possessing a wide stoichiometric range or to those solids exhibiting ordering of defects or extended defects (such as crystallographic shear planes). Although there is no clear-cut transition between the point-defect regime and the regime of highly ordered structural imperfections in nonstoichiometric solids, we can certainly say that the point-defect model is really valid only when the defect concentration (or the deviation from stoichiometry) is extremely small. Only in such dilute point-defect systems can one satisfactorily relate the electronic properties and the nonstoichiometry to the concentration of point defects.
A few general comments related to disorder and nonstoichiometry in crystals would be in order. Solids rarely attain a state of perfect order even when they are cooled close to absolute zero of temperature. At ordinary temperatures, crystalline solids generally depart from perfect order and contain several types of imperfections, which are, indeed, responsible for many important solid state phenomena such as diffusion, electrical conduction, plasticity and so on.
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- Information
- New Directions in Solid State Chemistry , pp. 229 - 281Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997