Ceramic materials for gas separation and oxygen storage

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 9764985
  • Patent Number
    9,764,985
  • Date Filed
    Friday, March 13, 2015
    9 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 19, 2017
    7 years ago
Abstract
A manganese oxide contains M1, optionally M2, Mn and O. M1 is selected from the group consisting of In, Sc, Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. M2 is different from M1, and M2 is selected from the group consisting of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. These ceramic materials are hexagonal in structure, and provide superior materials for gas separation and oxygen storage.
Description
BACKGROUND

The present invention relates to the selective storage and release of oxygen and gas separation by ceramic materials. In particular, the present invention relates to methods of elevated temperature air separation, oxygen storage, or any process related to temperature or oxygen partial-pressure dependent absorption and desorption of oxygen with ceramic materials.


Recently ceramic materials have been increasingly researched due to their reversible oxygen storage/release capacities (OSC) at elevated-temperatures. New ceramic materials for elevated-temperature air separation are strong candidates to compete with cryogenic distillation for commercial air separation and are also being researched for components to improve automotive exhaust catalysts, solar water splitting, hydrogen-oxygen fuel cells, various non-aerobic oxidation processes, and assorted high-temperature production processes that require high-purity oxygen (e.g. steel, copper, plastics, glass, etc.). Elevated temperature air separation methods have been projected to have 20-30% less capital and operation cost, while being significantly more energy efficient, than conventional air separation methods. The development of improved oxygen storage or carrier materials is also critical to the success of new energy related technologies such as “oxy-fuel” and “chemical looping” combustion systems for “clean coal” energy production, automotive pollution reduction, hydrogen-oxygen fuel cells, solar water splitting, and to improve the efficiency and cost of various production processes (e.g. steel, copper, plastics), and the production of synthesis gas (H2, CO) by partial oxidation of methane.


Ideal materials have large values of OSC (typically measured in moles of oxygen per weight of material) and their absorption/desorption of oxygen occurs over a narrow temperature range at near atmospheric conditions. Additional properties, such as oxygen partial pressure dependence of absorption/desorption, exothermic absorption and endothermic reduction, stability/recoverability in strong reducing conditions (e.g. CO and H2 atmospheres at high-temperatures), are also desired and being researched for various applications. Commercially, fluorite Ce1−xZrxO2 compositions have been the recent ceramic OSC materials of choice for air separation, which function around 500° C. and have OSCs of ˜400-500 μmol-O/g in oxygen atmospheres or as high as 1500 μmol-O/g with 20% H2 reversible reduction. Recent studies with Ce1−xCrxO2 have further boosted the OSC of the fluorite structure to as high as 2500 μmol-0/g in air and hydrogen atmospheres but require considerably higher reduction temperatures (550-700° C.) and contain poisonous Cr6+. Currently, RBaCo4O7+δ (R=Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu) and YBaCo4−xAlxO7+δ have the best reported OSC at low-temperature, which have storage up to ˜2700 μmol-O/g and completely desorb at ˜400-425° C. in O2. The ease of reversible phase transitions between the hexagonal P63mc YBaCo4O7 and orthorhombic Pbc21 YBaCo4O8.1 phases (which is a mixture of tetrahedrally and octahedrally coordinated cobalt) is responsible for its oxygen storage behavior.


RMnO3 (R=rare earths) and their competing hexagonal and perovskite crystal structures have been studied for over fifty years. Conventionally, the formation of the perovskite phase versus the hexagonal phase is governed primarily by the size of the rare-earth ion in RMnO3 (with constant Mn3+ size). During high-temperature solid state synthesis in air, the perovskite phase forms easily with larger rare-earth elements (e.g. La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Gd, Tb, and Dy), while smaller size rare-earths (e.g. Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu, and Y) favor the hexagonal phase. It has been observed that the perovskite phase is stable for a tolerance factor,







t
=


(

R
-
O

)



2



(

Mn
-
O

)




,





in the range of 0.855≦t≦1 (calculated at room temperature using Shannon's ionic size values), where the perovskite structure is increasingly distorted as it approaches this lower limit and results in the transition to the hexagonal phase at t<0.855. Recently, Zhou et al. suggested that the relative large difference in density between the perovskite and hexagonal phases can have a large impact on the formation of the perovskite versus the hexagonal near the lower limit of the tolerance factor. Regardless, DyMnO3 and YMnO3 have tolerance factors of 0.857 and 0.854, respectively, and will tend to form the perovskite and hexagonal phases, respectively, under normal solid state reaction synthesis. Thus the average (R—O) bond length of substituted samples causes Dy1−xYxMnO3 to be on the cusp of this phase transition and, as further discussed herein, results in a mixed state under synthesis in air.


U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2009/0206297 to Karppinen, et al. discloses an oxygen excess type metal oxide expressed with the following formula (1) and exhibiting high speed reversible oxygen diffusibility whereby a large amount of excess oxygen is diffused at a high speed and reversibly in a low temperature region:

AjBkCmDnO7+δ  (1)


where


A: one or more trivalent rare earth ions and Ca


B: one or more alkaline earth metals


C, D: one or more oxygen tetra-coordinated cations among which at least one is a transition metal, where j>0, k>0, and, independently, m≧0, n≧0, and j+k+m+n=6, and 0<δ≦1.5. The metal oxide has high oxygen diffusibility and large oxygen non-stoichiometry at a low temperature region (500° C. or less, in particular 400° C. or less) and a ceramic is disclosed for oxygen storage and/or an oxygen selective membrane comprised of the metal oxide. The Karppinen, et al. metal oxide has a high 2:1 ratio of expensive and poisonous Co (where C=Co) to the less expensive trivalent rare earth ions and alkaline earth metals. In addition, the compounds disclosed contain B=Ba that is highly reactive with CO2 and water vapor present in air and easily decompose when heated just above their optimal OSC temperature. The Karppinen, et al. metal oxide has the disadvantages of being expensive and not thermodynamically stable or safe.


One disadvantage of currently used materials for oxygen storage or air separation is that they depend on the creation of oxygen ion vacancies or interstitial sites at high-temperatures in order to store the oxygen. Currently, the majority of materials for air separation use high-pressure (zeolites) or low-temperature (cryogenic distillation) methods consuming large amounts of energy. However, roughly over 80% of commercially produced oxygen is used in high-temperature industrial productions process and many developing applications of OSC materials operate at high-temperatures as well. For any of these current and potential systems, the redirection of the large amounts of waste heat generated from all these methods to ceramic OSC materials for onsite air separation, would undoubtedly have potential net energy, economic, and waste advantages versus conventional methods. The majority of new ceramic OSC materials for such applications rely on the creation of oxygen ion vacancies or interstitial sites at high-temperatures; however, this is a poor mechanism for currently known materials due to the high-temperatures (up to 1000° C.) and large temperature gradients (˜300-800° C.) required for moderate oxygen storage capacities (less than 500 μmol-O/g).


Therefore, there remains a need for a method for the selective storage and release of oxygen that does not require extreme temperatures or large temperature gradients so as to reduce cost and energy consumption, as well as a method that is able to increase the amount of oxygen that is able to be stored.


SUMMARY

In a first aspect, the present invention is a rare-earth manganese oxide, comprising M1, optionally M2, Mn and O. M1 is selected from the group consisting of In, Sc, Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. M2 is different from M1, and M2 is selected from the group consisting of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. Mn and O are present in an atomic ratio of 1:z, and z is at least 3.15.


In a second aspect, the present invention is a rare-earth manganese oxide, comprising M1, M2, Mn and O. M1 is selected from the group consisting of In, Sc, Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. M2 is different from M1, and M2 is selected from the group consisting of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. M1 and M2 are present in an atomic ratio of x:1−x, and x=0.1 to 0.9.


In a third aspect, the present invention is a rare-earth manganese oxide, comprising (i) Mn, having a formal oxidation state between 2 and 3, or between 3 and 4, (ii) O, and (iii) at least one element selected from the group consisting of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. The rare-earth manganese oxide has an average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, of at most 400° C., and a temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, of at most 400° C.


In a fourth aspect, the present invention is an oxygen conducting membrane, comprising (1) a rare-earth manganese oxide, and (2) a support material. The membrane has first and second opposing surfaces, the membrane is not permeable to nitrogen gas, the rare-earth manganese oxide forms a contiguous structure exposed on both the first and second opposing surfaces, and the rare-earth manganese oxide has an average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, of at most 400° C., and a temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, of at most 400° C.


In a fifth aspect, the present invention is an oxygen conducting membrane, comprising (1) a manganese oxide, and (2) a support material. The membrane has first and second opposing surfaces, and the membrane is not permeable to nitrogen gas. The manganese oxide forms a contiguous structure exposed on both the first and second opposing surfaces, and the support material comprises at least one member selected from the group consisting of an organic polymer, a silicone rubber and glass.


In a sixth aspect, the present invention is a method of preparing oxygen, comprising separating oxygen from a mixture of gases containing the oxygen, by conducting the oxygen through the manganese oxide, or absorbing and releasing the oxygen from the manganese oxide.


In a seventh aspect, the present invention is a method of catalyzing a reaction with oxygen, comprising catalyzing the reaction with the manganese oxide.


In an eighth aspect, the present invention is a method generating electricity, comprising burning a carbon-containing fuel with oxygen, in a generator or power plant, wherein the oxygen is prepared by using the manganese oxide.


DEFINITIONS

The terms “rare-earth”, “rare-earth element”, and “rare-earth metal” include Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu.


The formal oxidation state of manganese, Mn, in a manganese oxide, for example a rare-earth manganese oxide, may be determined by: (a) multiplying the relative amount of each element other than manganese and oxygen by the most common oxidation of that element in an oxide, (b) multiplying the relative amount of oxygen by 2, (c) subtracting the first value (a) from the second value (b), and then dividing by the relative amount of manganese. The most common oxidation state in an oxide of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu is 3; and the most common oxidation state in an oxide of Ce and Th is 4. In the case of transition metals which have two or three common oxidation states in an oxide, the most common oxidation state in an oxide is the largest common oxidation state in an oxide; example values include 2 for Cu and Ni, 3 for Co and Fe, 4 for Ti, 5 for V and Nb, 6 for Mo and W, and 7 for Re. The following is an exemplary calculation for Dy0.3Y0.7MnO3.25: a=[(3×0.3)+(3×0.7)]=3; b=2×3.25=6.5; c=6.5−3=3.5; formal oxidation state of Mn =3.5/1=3.5.


The average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, is the temperature where the first derivative of oxygen content as a function of temperature is a maximum, as measured by thermogravimetric analysis in pure O2 with heating and cooling rates of 0.1° C./minute. The manganese oxides may have an average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, of at most 400° C., of at most 300° C., or of at most 250° C.


The temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, is the temperature where the first derivative of oxygen content as a function of temperature is a minimum, as measured by thermogravimetric analysis in pure O2 with heating and cooling rates of 0.1° C./minute. The manganese oxides may have a temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, of at most 400° C., of at most 300° C., or of at most 250° C.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIGS. 1a, 1b, 1c and 1d are X-ray diffraction patterns of the ceramic material;



FIGS. 2a, 2b, 2c, 2d and 2e are graphs of oxygen absorption/desorption of the ceramic material;



FIG. 3 is a graph of oxygen content versus temperature with TGA annealing and reduction of the ceramic material;



FIG. 4a and FIG. 4b are graphs of TGA oxygen content versus temperature for the ceramic material with heating (4a) and cooling (4b);



FIG. 5 is a graph showing relevant temperatures for the ceramic material;



FIG. 6 is a graph of TGA reduction in 21% O2 of high-pressure annealed ceramic material to stable 3.0 oxygen content;



FIG. 7 is a graph of TGA of the ceramic material switching between Ar and O2 at various isotherms;



FIG. 8 is a graph showing phase mapping of the ceramic material;



FIG. 9a and FIG. 9b are graphs of TGA (9a) and dilatometry (9b) measurements for DyMnO3 in 21% O2;



FIG. 10a and FIG. 10b are graphs of (10a) TEC values for P63 cm and Hex2 phases and (10b) chemical expansion (CE) parameter during the Hex2−P63 cm phase transition for Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ;



FIG. 11 is a dilatometry measurement of perovskite DyMnO3 in 21% O2;



FIGS. 12A, 12B, 12C, 12D, 12E and 12F are XRD patterns of DyMnO3+δ with δ=−0.037, 0.0, 0.18, 0.21, 0.24, and 0.35, arrows indicate the increase and decrease of peak intensity for hexagonal phases;



FIG. 13 is a graph of TGA reduction in 21% O2 of high-pressure annealed DyMnO3+δ to stable 3.0 oxygen content;



FIG. 14 is a graph of XRD comparison of DyMnO3+δ samples: P63 cm (δ=0), nearly single phase Hex2 (δ=0.24), and mixed phase of Hex2 and Hex3 (δ=0.35);



FIG. 15 is a graph of NPD pattern for DyMnO2.963 (SEPD), plus signs are observed data and the line below is the difference between experimental data and best fit calculated from the Rietveld refinement method;



FIG. 16A and FIG. 16B are best-fit Rietveld refinement patterns using high resolution synchrotron X-ray data with a wavelength of 0.40225 Å (11 BM-B), observed (plus signs) and calculated (solid line) intensities are displayed together with their difference (solid line at the bottom of each panel), lower and upper tick marks indicate the locations of Bragg reflections for the parent P63 cm and superstructure R3 phases, respectively; and



FIGS. 17A, 17B, 17C and 17D show TGA annealing: (17A) in air of DyMnO3+δ after initial synthesis in argon and subsequent reduction in H2 to Dy2O3 and MnO; (17B) in oxygen of YMnO3+δ after initial synthesis in air and reduction in H2 after anneal at 190 atm. of oxygen; (17C) in air for perovskite La0.5Sr0.5Fe0.5Co0.5O3+δ; and (17D) in O2 for perovskite LaMnO3+δ−.



FIG. 18 are graphs of TGA oxygen content versus temperature for the ceramic materials DyMnOy, YMnOy, and HoMnOy with heating and cooling in oxygen.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present invention provides a new system of ceramic materials for elevated temperature air separation methods, oxygen storage, or any process related to temperature or oxygen partial-pressure dependent absorption and desorption of oxygen. These processes are, but not limited to, Thermal Swing Absorption (TSA) and Ceramic Autothermal Recovery (CAR) methods.


The materials of the present invention behave like an “oxygen sponge.” Just as a sponge can absorb and release water under different pressures, the materials of the present invention can absorb and release oxygen when exposed to different temperatures or gasses. This property can be used to separate the major components of the air in the atmosphere, oxygen and nitrogen, by storing the oxygen in the ceramic materials, leaving nitrogen in the atmosphere. The oxygen that is absorbed and stored in the material is preferably oxygen ions, O2−. The ceramic materials are able to selectively absorb and release oxygen with near 100% selectivity and not absorb other gases. This is a key property that makes the materials excellent OSC materials.


The present invention provides for a ceramic material system that is represented by the formula

AjBkCmDnO3+δ


where


A: one or more trivalent rare earth ions and tetravalent rare earth elements,


B: one or more alkaline earth metals and Pb, Bi, In and Sc,


C, D: one or more oxygen bi-pyramidally-coordinated cations among which at least one is a transition metal or post-transition metal, where j>0, k≧0, and, independently, m≧0, n≧0, and j+k=1, m+n=1, and 0<δ≦0.5. In other words, C and D can be any transition metal or post-transition metal, for example, groups 3 through 12 on the periodic table (Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Y, Zr, Nb, Mo, Tc, Ru, Rh, Pd, Ag, Cd, Hf, Ta, W, Re, Os, Ir, Pt, Au, Hg, Rf, Db, Sg, Bh, Hs, and Cn) and Ga, In, Sn, Tl and Pb. The metal oxide has high oxygen diffusibility and large oxygen nonstoichiometry at a low temperature region of 400° C. or less and a ceramic is disclosed for oxygen storage and/or an oxygen selective membrane comprised of the metal oxide.


A and B can be chosen from the following ions: 3+ ions: Y, La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Ho, Dy, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu, Bi, In and Sc; 4+ ions: Th and Ce; and 2+ ions: Ca, Sr, Ba and Pb.


Alternatively, the ceramic materials are manganese oxides, for example rare-earth manganese oxide, containing M1, optionally M2, Mn and O. M1 is selected from Sc, Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu; M2 is different from M1, and M2 is selected from Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu. In some compositions, Mn and O are present in an atomic ratio of 1:z, and z is at least 3.1. In some compositions M1 and M2 are present in an atomic ratio of x:1−x, and x=0 to 1. In some compositions Mn has a formal oxidation state between 3 and 4. Preferably, the manganese oxide has an average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, of at most 400° C., and a temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, of at most 400° C.


It is also possible to substitute other metals for Mn in the ceramic manganese oxides. For example, 10 atomic %, or 15 atomic % of the Mn could be substituted with Co, Ni, Fe, Cu, Ru, Rh and/or In.


The value of z, which corresponds to the atomic ratio of oxygen per manganese, may be at least 3.2, or at least 3.24, or 3.1 to 3.4. It is also possible to remove oxygen, and have a value of z which is less than 3, for example where z is at most 2.9, or at most 2.8, such as 2.88 to 2.80. Preferably, the manganese oxide has an average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, of at most 400° C. (including at most 300° C., and at most 250° C.), and a temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, of at most 400° C. (including at most 300° C., and at most 250° C.).


The hexagonal DyMnO3 and YMnO3, (materials with no excess oxygen (δ=0)) are previously known compounds with known crystal structures. The ceramic material system is a new material having a new crystal structure with excess oxygen (as indicated by δ>0, these excess oxygen ions belong to the crystal structure. Their inclusion in crystal structure as O2− ions is compensated by oxygenation of Mn ions from 3+ to 3+2δ, such that the overall charge neutrality is preserved). In the example below, Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ is synthesized, wherein based on the above formula, A=Dy, B=Y, and C and D=Mn, and 0≦x≦1.


The present invention provides for a method of making the ceramic materials by synthesizing hexagonal P63 cm material, and oxygenating the material in partial-pressures of oxygen at low elevated temperatures (200-300° C.). This is also further described in the example below.


Unlike other oxygen storage materials, which depend on the creation of oxygen ion vacancies at high-temperatures, this system relies on a reversible phase transition between δ=0 and δ=0.25-0.5 phases at lower temperatures of approximately 300° C. They exhibit large changes of oxygen content over both a narrow temperature range and a small difference of oxygen pressure near atmospheric conditions. These attributes of this system allow use of inexpensive processes to incorporate and extract large quantities of oxygen.


An oxygen conducting membrane may be prepared from the manganese oxides, in combination with a support material. Because the oxygen absorption and conduction occur at temperatures much lower than in the perovskite materials, a much larger variety of support materials may be used. Possible support materials include materials which decompose when exposed to air at a temperature of 500° C., 400° C. or even 300° C., or which have a glass transition temperature or a melting point of at most 500° C., at most 400° C. or at most 300° C. Specific examples include organic polymers, silicone rubbers, glass, graphite, carbon black, aluminum, copper, iron, nickel, steel, zinc, tin, lead and alloys thereof. The manganese oxide forms a contiguous structure exposed on both opposing surfaces of the membrane. It may also be desirable for the support material to form a contiguous structure exposed on both opposing surfaces of the membrane, especially in the case of an electrically conductive support (see, for example, Thorogood et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,240,480).


The present invention provides for a method of storing oxygen, including the steps of exposing the ceramic system to oxygen, containing gas, selectively absorbing the oxygen in the system, and storing the oxygen. It has been discovered that these hexagonal materials have unusually large oxygen absorption at approximately 200-300° C. in oxygen atmospheres (storage, excess oxygen preserved on cooling to room temperature). The following steps are involved in the process of oxygen storage: oxygen molecules 2 present in a gas (for example air) reach the surface of the material where they are split to oxygen ions, the oxygen ions then diffuse through the crystal lattice of material and congregate near ions of the system such as manganese to form newly discovered crystal structures (δ>0).


These drastic uptakes of oxygen were observed to completely desorb when materials transitioned back to the stoichiometric P63 cm state (δ=0) during increased heating of the system to 275-375° C. or changing to lower oxygen partial-pressures (release) surrounding the system. The steps involved in the process of oxygen release occur in reverse order: oxygen ions diffuse towards the material surface, oxygen ions recombine on the surface to form molecular O2, which can be extracted and used. Therefore, the present invention also provides for a method of releasing oxygen, including the step of releasing the oxygen absorbed in the ceramic system.


For example, these materials can be used with known processes for air separation with OSC materials such as TSA and CAR. Thermal Swing Absorption (TSA) relies on temperature dependent oxygen absorption/desorption of its “oxygen carrier”. In this method, multiple beds of sorbent cycle in between two chambers that are at different temperatures. This creates oxygen rich and oxygen deficient atmospheres in each chamber. More recently, a method was patented in 2000 by Lin et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 6,059,858) for perovskite materials, which combines TSA and PSA (Pressure Swing Absorption) techniques in a process named Ceramic Autothermal Recovery (CAR). Again, multiple beds filled with sorbent are cycled through two chambers with a temperature gradient; however, in this method the chambers are also at different oxygen partial-pressures. Again, this creates two chambers that are oxygen rich and deficient. Sorbents designed for CAR also have endothermic reduction and exothermic absorption; therefore, the process operates autothermally, needing little or no heat added once operational.


The present invention provides for a method of separating gaseous or molecular O2 from at least a second gas, by exposing the ceramic system to the gaseous or molecular O2 and second gas, absorbing the gaseous or molecular O2 into the system, and separating the gaseous or molecular O2 from the second gas. This method can be performed with any number of gasses present, and allows for separation of gaseous or molecular O2 from the other gasses. Preferably, the second gas is nitrogen in separating oxygen from air. Other second gasses include hydrogen, He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, Rn, N2, CO, CO2, CH4.


In the example below, polycrystalline samples of Dy(1−x)Y(x)MnO3+δ were synthesized by solid state reaction with appropriate amounts of Dy2O3, Y2O3 and MnO2 (all with >99.99% purity). For all samples, reactants were thoroughly mixed in an agate mortar, and fired in air in the temperature range of 800-1200° C. with intermediate grindings followed by pressing samples into high-density pellets. All steps of the synthesis were monitored with X-ray powder diffraction measurements. Samples were fired several times until single phase perovskite was obtained, except for YMnO3, which forms hexagonal structure under these conditions (FIG. 1: X-ray diffraction patterns for DyMnO3 (a) and YMnO3 (b)). Similar to YMnO3 the HoMnO3 and ErMnO3 form hexagonal phases in air. Hexagonal phases were acquired from perovskite samples by firing under ultra-high-purity Argon (99.999%) with a hydroxyl purifier (measured oxygen partial-pressures of 5 to 10 ppm) in a temperature range of 1200-1400° C. (FIG. 1: X-ray diffraction pattern for DyMnO3 (c)). Hexagonal samples were then oxygenated at ambient pressure or under 250-350 bars of oxygen pressure at 200-400° C. followed by cooling at 0.1°/min to room temperature in order to achieve the largest oxygen content possible (FIG. 1: X-ray diffraction pattern for DyMnO3.35 (d)).


Temperature and oxygen partial-pressure dependence of reversible oxygen storage capacities (OSC) were demonstrated by thermogravimetric analysis (FIG. 2 reversible oxygen absorption/desorption of a typical perovskite material considered for application Sr2FeCoO5−δ (a, as evidenced by the data below in the Example), reversible oxygen absorption/desorption of the hexagonal material (b, as function of temperature) and (c, as a function of oxygen pressure), best available oxygen absorption/desorption material from literature: T. Motohashi, S. Kodota, Mater. Sci. Eng. B 148 (2008) 196 (d) and (e)). Hexagonal manganites have been largely believed to remain stoichiometric in oxygen content at elevated-temperatures; however, the thermogravimetric measurements of oxygen annealed hexagonal samples indicated unusually large oxygen absorption over a narrow temperature range ˜200-300° C., which return to stoichiometric behavior above 275-375° C. in O2 atmosphere. In addition to temperature dependence, the oxygen content of Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ was also found to be sensitive to changes in partial pressures of oxygen in these temperature ranges. The hexagonal P63 cm phase of this system was found to have considerable stability at high-temperature in partial pressures of oxygen and to be recoverable from a reduced state with negative values of δ obtained from reduction in hydrogen at 400° C.


The ceramic system of the present invention can be used for elevated temperature gas separation and oxygen storage methods, which include, but are not limited to, oxygen and nitrogen production and components for oxy-fuel “clean coal” power plants, automotive exhaust catalysts, H2—O2 fuel cells, solar water splitting methods, and steel, copper, and plastic production and any other various industrial production processes which require high-purity oxygen and have large amounts of waste heat. The ceramic system can replace cryogenic distillation or pressure swing absorption for commercial air separation.


The ceramic system of the present invention has several advantages over the prior art. This system of materials has been shown to have comparable OSC with current commercial ceramic materials while operating at lower temperatures and has a smaller necessary temperature gradient for oxygen absorption/desorption. This system can also have faster oxygen absorption/desorption rates. In addition it is made of inexpensive and abundant elements.


The invention is further described in detail by reference to the following experimental examples. These examples are provided for the purpose of illustration only, and are not intended to be limiting unless otherwise specified. Thus, the invention should in no way be construed as being limited to the following examples, but rather, should be construed to encompass any and all variations which become evident as a result of the teaching provided herein.


EXAMPLES
Example 1
Experimental Techniques

Synthesis was done by solid state reaction, which is further detailed in the following section. X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) measurements were made with a Rigaku D/MAX powder diffractometer in the 2θ=20-70° range with CuKα radiation. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) measurements were made with Cahn TG171 and Cahn TherMax700 thermobalances in several different partial-pressures of oxygen and hydrogen (balanced with argon) up to 1400° C. at heating and cooling rates of 0.1-1.0°/min. TGA samples were approximately 1 g and were measured with a 5 μg precision. Dilatometry measurements were made with a Linseis Differential Dilatometer L75 and samples were measured with a 1 μm precision.


Results and Discussion


Synthesis and Stability


Polycrystalline samples of hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ were synthesized by solid state reaction with appropriate amounts of Dy2O3, Y2O3, and MnO2 (all with >99.99% purity). For all samples, reactants were thoroughly mixed in an agate mortar, and fired in air in the temperature range of 800-1300° C. with intermediate grindings followed by pressing samples into high-density pellets at approximately 1 kbar. All steps of the synthesis were monitored with XRD measurements and compared to previous diffraction measurements in the literature of hexagonal P63 cm and perovskite Pnma phases of DyMnO3 and YMnO3 (FIG. 1). Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ samples which formed the perovskite or a mixed phase in air instead of the single phase hexagonal structure (x=0, 0.1 0.3, 0.5, 0.7), were then fired under ultra-high-purity argon (99.999%) at 1300 and 1400° C. Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ samples (x=0 and 0.1) were then subsequently fired under ultra-high-purity argon with a hydroxyl purifier (oxygen partial pressures of 5-10 ppm) at 1400° C. All samples achieved the hexagonal P63 cm structure after these conditions.


Considerable effort was devoted to synthesizing Dy-rich, homogenous hexagonal samples. The hexagonal DyMnO3 phase has been previously achieved by epitaxially stabilized crystal growth with thin-films, thermal decomposition with polynuclear coordination compound precursors, quenching methods from 1600° C. in air or 1250° C. in argon for 3 days with sol-gel methods. This work confirmed that synthesis in argon at high-temperature tends to favor the formation of the hexagonal phase, while synthesis in oxygen tends to favor the perovskite phase.



FIG. 8 is a mapping of the phases that were measured with XRD after several synthesis steps, which clearly shows that increasing reducing conditions are needed to form the hexagonal phase as the average ionic radius of the R-site increases. The oxygen content dependence of the tolerance factor, which was previously studied for substituted SrMnO3, is most likely responsible for this behavior. The formation of oxygen vacancies in RMnO3+δ (δ<0) causes a change in oxidation state in some of the Mn3+ cations to Mn2+, resulting in a net Mn(3+2δ)+ cation, which increases the (Mn—O) bond length with decreasing δ. TGA measurements in oxygen (FIGS. 4A and 4B) show the reduced oxygen contents after synthesis of single phase hexagonal samples in argon. The resulting larger (Mn—O) bond lengths of these samples decrease their tolerance factor below the lower limit of 0.855 and results in the perovskite phase undergoing a phase transition to the hexagonal phase. Using Shannon room temperature values, the minimum necessary value of δ ranges from −0.023 to −0.0027 to have t≦0.855. It was observed, however, that samples with the corresponding δ values did not transform completely to the hexagonal phase (TABLE 1). Previous in situ measurements with Ca and La substituted SrMnO3 have shown that both (Ca,Sr,La—O) and (Mn—O) bond lengths increase with temperature in a manner which increases the value of the tolerance factor. Therefore, the transition from the perovskite phase to the hexagonal phase most likely occurs in various oxygen pressures at δ which is a function of temperature, which occurs for DyMnO3+67, for example, in ˜10 ppm O2 at 1400° C. as observed here or in air at 1600° C. as previously reported. The combination of previous in situ measurements with similar manganites and XRD measurements of various oxygen contents after progressive increased reducing conditions strongly support this conclusion.









TABLE 1







Hexagonal-Perovskite transition δ-values: from condition t(δTheo) = 0.855,


δobs.are observed values from TGA, and values of t are calculated with


Shannon values.












X
δTheo.
δobs.
t (δobs.)
















0
−0.0230
−0.037(0)
0.852(8)



0.1
−0.0201
−0.049(3)
0.847(0)



0.3
−0.0143
−0.015(1)
0.854(9)



0.5
−0.0085
−0.020(9)
0.853(1)



0.7
−0.0027
−0.017(1)
0.852(7)










Several other factors can also affect this transition. It can be enhanced by the difficultly of maintaining the twelvefold coordination of R required for the perovskite in a high-temperature, oxygen deficient atmosphere; thus, an eightfold coordination with hexagonal symmetry results. As mentioned in the introduction, the relative large difference in density between the perovskite and hexagonal phases plays a significant role in this transition. The crystal strain of the perovskite phase by Jahn-Teller distortions may also destabilize the structure to favor the hexagonal phase. In any case, the reducing conditions needed for production of bulk polycrystalline samples of DyMnO3 and Dy0.1Y0.9MnO3 by standard firing methods were very near to decomposition to simple oxides and many attempts were needed to find the most favorable temperature and length of the firings. Increased substitution of Y in DyMnO3 considerably eases the necessary reducing conditions to synthesize the hexagonal phase.


The stability of hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ compounds was also tested by firing samples at high-temperatures, 1100-1400° C., in oxygen. As reducing conditions favor the hexagonal phase, atmospheres that allow samples to remain near stoichiometric in oxygen content (or yield excess oxygen content, δ>0) at high-temperature promotes the perovskite phase over the hexagonal, due to the smaller size of the Mn(3+2δ)+ cation in oxygen versus argon. Dy rich samples (x=0, 0.1) began slight decomposition back to the perovskite at 1100° C. and completely transformed back to the perovskite at 1400° C. The remaining samples (x=0.7, 0.5, 0.3, 0.1, 0) remained hexagonal with no signs of decomposition back to the perovskite up to 1400° C. These results are in agreement with the presented tolerance factor arguments and can also explain why small rare-earth manganites (R=Y, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu) have been observed to transition to the perovskite phase under high-pressure oxygen, while smaller A-site cations (R=Sc and In) will not transform to perovskite under similar conditions.


Thermogravimetric Measurements of OSC


After initial synthesis of the hexagonal phase, all samples were annealed in TGA up to 500° C. with 0.1-1° C./min heating and cooling in various partial-pressures of oxygen and hydrogen to measure OSC values and to demonstrate temperature and oxygen-partial pressure dependence of oxygen content. The oxygen content after initial synthesis of DyMnO3+δ and YMnO3+δ were determined with TGA by the difference in weight between oxygenated samples and their respective reduction products, Dy2O3, Y2O3, and MnO (verified by XRD), obtained by first annealing at 1° C./minute in O2 and followed by slow reduction at 0.1° C./minute in 42% H2/Ar as shown for DyMnO3+δ in FIG. 3. DyMnO3 and YMnO3 were observed to reduce to stable stoichiometric P63 cm phase in oxygen above 375 and 275° C., respectively. Using this information, stable weights of all samples above 400° C. in O2 in TGA were normalized to δ=0. TABLE 2 is a compilation of OSC values achieved by the following assorted methods.









TABLE 2







OSC (μmol-O/g) of Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ; isotherms in AR—O2 were done near


“transition temp.” on FIG. 5 and reduction in H2 were conducted at 400° C. (*calculated values).




















Theoretical




cooling rate
1.0° C./min
0.1° C./min
0.1° C./min
Isotherm
Max.
Isotherm



atmosphere
O2
O2
250 bars O2
Ar—O2
Ar—O2/O2
- with H2 reduction


















x
0.0
812
926
1327
770
1884*
+455



0.1
729
1138
1388

1937*
 +499*



0.3
444
1200
1397
1149
2055*
 +596*



0.5
637
1169
1625
1091
2187*
+705



0.7
133
849
1542
493
2337*
 +829*



0.9
176
952
1694

2501*
 +972*



1.0
53
666
1338
95
2606*
+1051 









The TGA data on heating of DyMnO3+δ in air (FIG. 17A) clearly shows the reversible absorption (around 250-300° C.) and desorption (above 320° C.) of excess oxygen in a narrow temperature range. On cooling absorption occurs around 280° C. The resulting OSC values measured by the difference in oxygen content between the stoichiometric phase observed above 400° C. (δ=0) and the oxygen content around 200° C. (δ=0.01-0.29) yielded values of 54-1200 μmol-O/g for Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ compounds. Similar TGA measurements for YMnO3+δ (FIG. 17B) in oxygen showed smaller amounts of oxygen absorption (around 180-240° C.) and desorption (above 260° C.) occurring at lower temperatures. As a comparison, FIGS. 17C-17D show typical TGA traces for perovskite materials La0.5Sr0.5Fe0.5Co0.5O3+δ and LaMnO3+δ. FIG. 18 shows exemplary oxygen adsorption and desorption on heating and reversible adsorption on cooling in oxygen atmosphere of hexagonal YMnO3 and DyMnO3. These materials show large oxygen non-stoichiometry up to δ=−0.50, indicating possibly very large OSC. However, reaching these values require a wide temperature gradients exceeding 700° C., unlike the hexagonal compounds where δ=0.30-0.40 can be achieved after high oxygen pressure anneal over narrow temperature ranges less than 100° C.


Samples (x=0.1, 0.3, 0.5) were able to attain the highest oxygen contents while having smaller molar weights resulting in OSC values up to 2000 μmol-O/g in air after prolonged annealings. XRD data of these phases for Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ indicate the formation of super structures at δ=0.25 (Hex2) and δ=0.40 (Hex3), which are currently studied with neutron powder diffraction measurements. Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ materials showed also oxygen content dependence on oxygen partial pressure at constant temperatures. Cycling between O2 and Ar atmospheres for periods of 12 hours at temperatures as low as 300° C. yielded OSC values of 95-1149 μmol-O/g. While the values reported here do not surpass the best observed OSC in the literature, the Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ system does have several advantages for application over other candidate materials. Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ system has the lowest reported absorption/desorption cycling temperatures, being approximately 100° C. lower than the lowest reported temperatures of YBaCo4−xAlxO7+δ while showing far superior thermodynamical stability. Additionally, from a hazardous waste and cost standpoints, mass-production of manganese oxides is much preferable to that of cobalt or chromium oxides. Finally, unlike the majority of other OSC materials, which depend on the creation of oxygen ion vacancies at high temperatures, the hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ (similar to YBaCo4−xAlxO7+δ) relies on reversible phase changes due to oxygen filling/discharge of the interstitial sites at much lower temperatures.


Temperature dependence of oxygen content of Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ was measured in TGA with heating and cooling rates of 0.1 and 1.0° C./minute under high-purity oxygen. The resulting TG curves (0.1° C./min, FIGS. 4A and 4B) clearly show the reversible absorption and desorption of oxygen below 400° C. in a narrow temperature range. OSC values were measured by the difference in oxygen content between the stoichiometric P63 cm phase observed above 400° C. (δ=0) and the final oxygen content after cooling (δ=0.01-0.29), which yielded a large range of values, 54-1200 μmol-O/g (TABLE 2). Comparing 0.1 versus 1.0° C./min, resultant TGA curves and OSC values indicate that oxygen absorption rates increase with increased Dy content. Yet, samples (x=0.1, 0.3, 0.5) were able to achieve higher oxygen content than the pure Dy sample on 0.1° C./min cooling. Y-rich samples (x=0.7, 0.9, and 1) were also able to yield larger OSC values than observed in TGA with long isothermal steps with slow cooling and indicate, if given enough time (>24 hours), would reach excesses in oxygen content up to δ=0.25. Four different temperatures were also identified from TGA runs in O2, which are plotted in FIG. 5: the average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption on heating and cooling







(





(

Ox
.
Cont
.

)





(

Temp
.

)



=

local





maximum


)

,





maximum oxygen desorption







(





(

Ox
.
Cont
.

)





(

Temp
.

)



=

local





maximum


)

,





transition temperature from oxygen absorption to desorption, and the temperature where samples return to the stoichiometric P63 cm phase






(





(

Ox
.
Cont
.

)





(

Temp
.

)



=
0

)





(these can be approximately identified on FIGS. 4A and 4B by inspection). A thermal swing absorption process for air separation for each of these samples can involve cycling in between their respective temperatures slightly above “Ox=3.0” and slightly below “Ave. Max. Absorption” in air. These resulting cycling ranges are approximately 220-300° C. (x=1) to 310-390° C. (x=0) and produce large amounts of O2 over these narrow temperature ranges.


Samples were also annealed at 250 bars of O2 at 400° C. followed by 0.1° C. cooling. The oxygen content of these samples after annealing were determined in TGA by the difference in weight between their starting weight and their weight at 375° C. (1° C./min heating) in 21% O2 normalized to δ=0 (FIG. 6). All samples showed significant increase in OSC (particularly with samples rich in Y content) under high pressure versus identical cooling in 1 bar of O2 (TABLE 2). FIG. 6 also shows increased stability of oxygen content on reduction at ˜300° C. for all samples, which shows Dy1−xYxMn3+0.5Mn4+0.5O3.25 (Hex2) is a stable phase and another stable phase at or above an oxygen content of 3.35 may exist. XRD data of these phases for DyMnO3+δ have been previously reported and indicate the formation of super structures at δ=0.25 (Hex2) and δ=0.40 (Hex3). Though these samples show increased oxygen content from atmospheric pressure oxygenations, the Mn3+ cation is still not completely oxidized to the Mn4+ state, which is ideal for maximum OSC values. TABLE 2 also includes these theoretical values of OSC for a reversible Mn3+—Mn4+(δ=0−δ=0.5) transition. The significant increase of calculated OSC values with increased Y content in TABLE 2 is due to the smaller molar weight of Y cation and is one of the reasons why the Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ system was chosen for study after work with hexagonal

DyMnO3+δ.


Oxygen partial-pressure dependence of oxygen content of Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ and absorption/desorption reversibility were demonstrated with TGA measurements at isotherm in cycling O2 and Ar atmospheres every ˜12 hours (FIG. 7). Samples were held at temperatures near their respective “transition temperatures” defined from FIG. 5 (for x=0, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, and 1; T=330, 300, 280, 250, and 230° C., respectively) and yielded OSC values of 95-1149 μmol-O/g (TABLE 2). Besides DyMnO3+δ, which clearly comes to equilibrium in O2, these OSC values are comparisons of absorption after 12 hours. Given more time, these samples can achieve higher oxygen content, for example δ=0.28 was obtained for Dy0.3Y0.7MnO3+δ after ˜60 hours. Isothermal measurements also show oxygen content to have asymptotic behavior significantly lower than achieved upon cooling (most noticeably for x=1 and 0). Further isothermal TGA measurements at various temperatures have also shown this kinetically oxygen-content limiting behavior, which increases equilibration time at lower temperatures (this limiting behavior accounts for the significant differences in absorption rates of FIGS. 4 and 7). Therefore, the OSC of samples (x=0 and 1) increase at lower isothermal temperatures and the desorption rate of x=0.7 increases at slightly higher temperatures. The nature of these transitions from the P63 cm phase (δ=0) to the Hex2 phase (δ=0.25) and from the Hex2 phase to the Hex3 phase (δ=0.40) appears to easily equilibrate to intermediate oxygen content values. As a result, a mixture of several phases will occur in various oxygen partial-pressures and temperatures, where low-temperatures, 150-200° C., can favor the Hex3 phase; intermediate-temperatures, 230-330° C., favor the Hex2 phase; and high-temperatures, above ˜275-375° C., favor the stoichiometric P63 cm phase (these ranges are dependent on oxygen partial-pressure and Dy/Y content). The slope of oxygen content versus temperature during the P63 cm−Hex2 phase transition at constant temperature (as well as on cooling in FIG. 4) decreases with increased Y content, which again indicates slower absorption rates of Y-rich samples. Direct comparisons of these absorption rates are, however, complicated by slower oxygen ion kinetics at lower temperatures, which can approximated by






D
=


D
0







-

o
A


RT


.







The lower temperatures at which the Hex2−P63 cm phase transition occurs for Y rich samples prevents absorption comparisons at similar temperatures; thus, the differences in absorption observed in FIG. 7 are due to both differences in activation energy and temperature. This increased rate of transition from the P63 cm phase to the Hex2 phase may also be due to increased distortion to the P63 cm structure caused by larger average R-site anions. On the other hand, the transition from the Hex2 to Hex3 phase (δ≧˜0.25) appears to favor Y doped DyMnO3.25 samples (x=0.1, 0.3, 0.5) over pure DyMnO3.25, as seen on cooling in FIG. 4.


Hydrogen reductions in TGA for DyMnO3+δ and YMnO3+δ, which were initially done to determine oxygen content, showed to have increased stability on reduction at δ=−0.12 and −0.20, respectively (as seen in FIG. 3 for DyMnO3). To test for recoverability of the P63 cm DyMnO3+δ and YMnO3+δ phases, materials were heated to and held at 400° C. in 42% H2/Ar in TGA until these respective values of δ were reached. These samples were then cooled in Ar to 330 and 230° C., respectively, and held at these temperatures under O2. Samples quickly returned to stoichiometric oxygen content (>1 hour) and continued to absorb oxygen as seen during oxygen cycles in FIG. 7. XRD measurements after this process confirmed that samples did not decompose to simple oxides. Thus, the addition of cycling to 400° C. in hydrogen to either thermal or oxygen partial-pressure cycling would yield an additional ˜450-1050 μmol-O/g (for x=0-1) and would place these materials up to near record levels of OSC, ranging from 1150-2650 μmol-0/g (TABLE 2, where calculated values assume the stabilities seen at δ=−0.12 to δ=−0.20 changes proportionally with x for intermediate samples).


While the values measured here do not surpass the best observed OSC in the literature and the slow oxygen kinetics of Y-rich samples (x=0.7, 0.9, 1) may be a limiting factor for their potential use for OSC application, the Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ system does have the several key advantages for application over these other candidates. First and foremost, the Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ system has the lowest reported reduction temperature, being approximately 25-125° C. lower than the record reduction temperature of YBaCo4−xAlxO7+δ (with significant OSC values). On further comparison to YBaCo4−xAlxO7+δ, which decomposes at 550-700° C., Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ has far superior stability, remaining stable up to 1100-1400° C. Additionally, from a hazardous waste and cost standpoint, mass-production of manganese oxides is much preferable to that of cobalt or chromium oxides. Finally, there is great potential for the Mn cation in hexagonal RMnO3+δ to have large changes in oxidation state because, unlike the majority of OSC materials, which depend on the creation of oxygen ion vacancies or interstitial sites at high-temperatures, the hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ (as seen also with YBaCo4−xAlxO7+δ) relies on reversible phase transitions between several structures containing transition metal ions in variable coordination. The potential OSC of related hexagonal manganites could easily surpass the current highest reported values, if they can be modified to easily and reversibly transition in between phases with large amounts of Mn2+ and Mn4+ at low-temperatures.


Finally, apart from any possible OSC application, it should be noted that hexagonal manganites have been largely believed to remain stoichiometric in oxygen content at elevated-temperatures. In situ structural measurements at high-temperatures have reported a displacement of the MnO5 bipyramids and a transition to the P63/mmc structure, which occur for YMnO3 at ˜650° C. and ˜950° C., respectively. Slight excesses of oxygen content (δ=0.01) have been reported at 1200° C. for YMnO3+δ and ErMnO3+δ but have not observed the non-stoichiometric oxygen content behavior or the associated structural changes at lower temperatures as have been observed with thermogravimetric and XRD measurements. This behavior may not have been previously observed in other hexagonal manganites due to the narrow range of temperature (˜200-350° C.) these new phases exist on heating before returning back to δ=0 above ˜350° C. and the slow cooling or high oxygen partial-pressures they require. As discussed above, this temperature range has not been of particular interest for structural studies of RMnO3, as most of this work has been done at either low-temperature to study magnetic ordering (≦200 K) or high-temperature to measure the rattling behavior of the MnO5 bipyramids or structural transitions (≧500° C.). The results herein indicate that the hexagonal RMnO3+δ family is most likely prone to considerable oxygen non-stoichiometry and also show a direct relation between reduction temperature and sorption rates of oxygen to the average ionic size of R. If this is the case, other hexagonal RMnO3+δ materials with rare-earths that are close in ionic size to that of Y (e.g. Ho and Er) can have similar non-stoichiometric behavior. It should be noted that the synthesis of YMnO3+δ under fast cooling to room temperature yielded small, but measurable, excesses in oxygen content (δ=0.004). Many studies of RMnO3+δ use samples prepared at elevated-temperature followed by various cooling rates, which would yield slightly non-stoichiometric samples for low-temperature measurements. Properties associated with excess oxygen content (e.g. disruptions to the exchange interaction or the presence of Mn4+) may very well have had a significant impact on the multiferroic properties of these samples, as it has been observed that even slight oxygen and cation non-stoichiometry can have profound effects on magnetic and transport properties of perovskite manganites.


Crystal Structure


XRD measurements were made to verify the hexagonal P63 cm structure of DyMnO2.963 and DyMnO3.0 (samples 1 and 2) and to obtain a preliminary structural understanding of annealed samples. FIGS. 12A-12F are a compilation of XRD patterns collected for samples 1-4, 6 and 7 listed in TABLE 3. Peak positions and intensities of DyMnO2.963 and DyMnO3.0 were found to be in good agreement with previously reported XRD patterns of P63 cm DyMnO3. Furthermore, XRD data of the quenched sample (sample 2) confirmed that stoichiometric samples are indeed the hexagonal P63 cm phase after quenching from above 400° C. as observed with TGA data. XRD patterns of annealed samples (samples 3, 4, and 6) in the 6 range of 0.18-0.24 clearly show growth of a second phase (Hex2) and a disappearance of the P63 cm phase (where arrows indicate the growth and decrease of selected peaks for the P63 cm and the Hex2 phase, respectively). The diffraction pattern of sample 6 (δ=0.24) is nearly single phase for this new set of peaks and is in agreement with the stability seen in TGA at δ ˜0.25 (FIG. 13). Finally, the XRD pattern of the high-pressure annealed sample (sample 7, δ=0.35) shows a decrease of peak intensity for the Hex2 phase and the presence of additional peaks (third phase, Hex3), which is again in agreement with TGA observations. The relative intensities of the Hex2 and Hex3 phases suggest that the Hex3 phase can have an oxygen content of δ=0.40, though this is difficult to approximate due to the high degree of peak position overlapping. To help clarify the development of new peaks and peak overlap, FIG. 14 shows an overlay of XRD patterns of samples 2, 6, and 7 (δ=0.0, 0.24, and 0.35) in the 2θ range of 26-35°. FIGS. 13 and 14 show similarities of the diffraction patterns of the Hex2, Hex3, and P63 cm phases, which show that the Hex2 and Hex3 phases are structurally related to the P63 cm phase. The increased number of peaks seen in the Hex2 and Hex3 phases versus the P63 cm phase also shows a general lowering of symmetry or the formation of a super-structure. Finally, it should also be noted, though these transformations are unlikely at these low-temperatures under O2, that the Hex2 and Hex3 phases were compared to patterns of other known RxMny4+Mny−13+O3+δ systems (e.g. pyrochlore R2Mn2O7, perovskite R-3c, R2MnO4 and RMn2O5 phases) and oxides (Mn2O3, MnO2), which can account for the increase in oxygen content. No traces of these structures were observed.









TABLE 3







List of annealed DyMnO3+δ samples










Sample
Conditions after




no.
synthesis of P63 cm in Ar
Sample type
δ













1
None
Small pellets
−0.037


2
Quenched from 420° C. air
Small pellets
0.00


3
Cooled from 500° at 1.0° C./min in
Small pellets
0.18



21% O2 at standard pressure


4
Cooled from 500° at 1.0° C./min in
Small pellets
0.21



O2 at standard pressure


5
Cooled from 500° at 0.1° C./min in
Small pellets
0.24



O2 at standard pressure


6
Cooled from 500° at 0.1° C./min in
Small pellets
0.35



O2 at ~250 bars









Guided by the initial XRD investigation, NPD measurements were conducted for selected samples. High-resolution, backscattering data (2θ=144°, Bank 1 of SEPD) were used for DyMnO2.963, DyMnO3.0, and DyMnO3.21 (samples 1, 2, and 4, respectively) at room temperature. Low-angle scattering data (2θ=44°, bank 3) were also used for DyMnO3.21 at room temperature. High resolution synchrotron x-ray data were also collected for DyMnO3.21 at room temperature.


Raw data for samples 1 and 2 were analyzed with the Rietveld method in the space group P63 cm based on previous reports for the hexagonal RMnO3 system and the XRD measurements (FIG. 15). Structural sites of this refinement were 2a for Dy1 and O3; 4b for Dy2 and O4; and 6c for Mn1, O1, and O2. Cations occupancies were fixed at one and the site occupancies of oxygen ions were allowed to vary. Initial refinements of the DyMnO3.0 sample's occupancies varied less than one standard deviation from fully stoichiometric oxygen content and were fixed to one for its final fitting. For DyMnO2.963 occupancies of the O1 and O2 sites were also fixed to one as refinements yielded values slightly greater than one. Oxygen ion vacancies were found to prefer the O3 and O4 sites nearly equally. The resulting oxygen content of this sample calculated from these refined occupancies (δ=−0.045) is in reasonable agreement with the value obtained from TGA (δ=−0.037). For both these samples (1 and 2), the calculated diffraction pattern of P63 cm is in good match with the observed data for both samples and their lattice parameters are in agreement with a previous XRD report for DyMnO3. Bond lengths were calculated using the geometric average by assuming full site occupancy. The average (Mn—O) bond length clearly increases from the stoichiometric to the reduced state, while the average (Dy—O) bond length remains, relatively, unchanged. Again, this is due to the enlargement of the Mn(3+2δ)+ cation with increasing oxygen deficiency. These results are in agreement with the oxygen vacancy dependence of the tolerance factor and support the synthesis arguments of forming the hexagonal phase by reduction of the perovskite RMnO3+δ phase.


Analysis of neutron and synchrotron diffraction data for sample 4 (DyMnO3.21) revealed the formation of a large superstructure constructed by tripling the c-axis of the P63 cm phase (c>33 Å). Several other superstructure models and combinations of possible phase mixtures were also examined but they all failed to index the large number of extra peaks. Analysis of the superstructure's structural symmetry led to the identification of R3 as the space group that could successfully index all peaks including the tiny ones. We note here that there is no direct relationship between the two P63 cm and R3 space groups. Such a group/subgroup relationship is not required for two samples that are not chemically the same. A group/subgroup relationship is required when dealing with a unique sample in which structural phase transitions occur at various temperatures or pressures. In the present case, the R3 structure of the oxygen loaded DyMnO3.21 sample was determined as the space group of the highest symmetry that can be successfully used to index all Bragg reflections and refine the positions of the Dy and Mn cations. Determination of the exact locations and site occupancies of the diverse oxygen atoms remain challenging due to the complexity of the superstructure and the nature of synchrotron x-rays that are inherently much less sensitive to oxygen than neutrons, especially in the presence of Mn and the heavy Dy rare-earth. Rietveld refinements using synchrotron data are presented in FIGS. 16A and 16B. In the refinements, the cation positions and thermal factors were all refined whereas the oxygen atoms were kept fixed at positions derived from the tripled structure. As shown in FIGS. 16A and 16B, two phases were included in the final refinements: the small parent P63 cm hexagonal structure (lower tick marks) and the larger R3 superstructure (upper tick marks). Fractional percentages by weight for the two phases refined to 14% and 86%, respectively. It's obvious that the parent phase fails to index the observed extra peaks that refine with R3. The superstructure's lattice parameters are listed in TABLE 4 together with the positions of the Dy and Mn cations in which we have high confidence. The exact determination of the oxygen atoms in such a small molecule-like superstructure would necessitate further collection of high quality neutron diffraction data preferably using new RMnO3+d samples in which the highly neutron absorbing Dy would be replaced by Y or other trivalent rare-earth elements with significantly smaller neutron absorption cross sections such as Ho and Er.









TABLE 4







Structural parameters for the R3 superstructure of DyMnO3.21.








R3
DyMnO321











Atom
X
Y
Z
B(Å2)














Dy1
0
0
-0.06995(5)
0.30(4)


Dy2
0
0
0.07041(5)
0.04(4)


Dy3
0
0
0.25180(11)
0.19(3)


Dy4
0
0
0.43022(6)
0.97(5)


Dy5
0
0
0.57090(6)
0.50(4)


Dy6
0
0
0.74966(11)
0.32(3)


Mn1
0.4261(5)
0.0019(9)

2.8(1)a


Mn2
0.3672(7)
0.6254(6)
0.50109(21)

0.47(6)a









Lattice parameters
a = 6.231(4) and c = 33.346(3)


(Å)


Reliability factors
Rwp= 13.7%, Rp= 9.8%, R1= 4.4%, c2= 11.4






aThese values clearly correlate with the undetermined distorted oxygen environment around Mn as expected from the insertion of fractional amounts of additional oxygen. Please see the text for more details.







Thermal and Chemical Expansion


Expansion of the crystal lattice can occur through two mechanisms: thermal and chemical expansion. Thermal expansion (TE), as discussed in tolerance factor arguments, is caused by expansion of the (R—O) and (Mn—O) bond lengths due to increased thermal energy at elevated temperature. Chemical expansion (CE) is caused by expansion of the lattice due to changes in oxygen stoichiometry. The TGA measurements of Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ materials, discussed above, have shown large changes in oxygen stoichiometry between two stable oxygen content regions, which occur on heating over a relatively short time scale (≦2 hours) and narrow range of temperatures (˜100° C.). These characteristics allowed for the measurement of the effective CE over a narrow range of temperatures by simply subtracting the relatively small value of TE from the observed value of CE. Similarly precise measurements of TE, without the any effect from CE, were possible in temperature regions of stable oxygen content. It should also be noted that in some cases the thermal expansion coefficient (TEC) is considered to be the net result of both CE and TE; here these are considered to be separate effects, thus TEC herein is only attributed to TE. The following equations were used to calculate TE and CE:







TEC
=


1

L
o




1

n
-
m







i
=
m

n









Δ






L

i
+
1



-

Δ






L
i





τ

i
+
1


-

τ
i






,





measured in K−1, where L0, ΔL, and T are the sample starting length, the change in length, and temperature, respectively, and m-n are the sets from the measured temperature ranges and







CE
=


1
Δσ



(



Δ





L


L
o


-



TEC



Δ





T


)



,





measured in (moles of O)−1, where Δδ is the absolute change in oxygen content from stoichiometric 3.0 and <TEC> is the average TEC of the two oxygen content stable regions.


A perovskite sample of DyMnO3 for dilatometry was cut from a dense pellet after initial synthesis in air (˜5×3×2 mm in shape) and was measured in 21% O2/Ar atmosphere with heating rates of 0.5° C./min to 900° C. (FIG. 11). Previous studies of the perovskite DyMnO3+δ phase have shown that it remains stoichiometric in 21% O2/Ar up to ˜1000° C., thus the expansion seen in FIG. 8 is solely due to TE. The TEC was measured from 50-850° C. and was found to be 7.3*10−6 K−1, which is in good agreement with a previous report.


Pellets for dilatometry measurements were cut from dense samples (x=0, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 1) after synthesis of the hexagonal material (˜5×3×2 mm in shape) and were then annealed at 400° C. with 0.1° C./min cooling in O2. The oxygen contents of these dense samples were also measured with identical conditions on TGA to determine the appropriate temperature ranges to separately extract TE and CE coefficients (the structural phases present and after dilatometry measurements were also confirmed with XRD). TE values were measured for these samples in their respective temperature regions of stable oxygen content observed in TGA for δ=0.22-0.29 (˜50-300° C.) and for δ=0 (˜600-850° C.). CE values were measured during the reduction between these stable oxygen contents over approximate temperature gradient of ˜100° C. in the range of 240-390° C., where approximately 90% of the total oxygen reduction occurs. FIGS. 9A-9B show these measurements for DyMnO3 and illustrates how the combination of dilatometry and TGA measurements was used in to determine TE and CE for all Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ samples. The lower starting oxygen contents after annealing in oxygen and the slower reduction of dense pellets (as seen for DyMnO3+δ in FIG. 9A) versus the small chucks of material observed in FIG. 4 during TGA measurement are due to the differences in the samples' density, surface area, and diffusion distances. The TEC of the hexagonal phases in these two temperature regions of stable oxygen content were found to be quite different, 8.2-10.2*10−6 K−1 (δ=0.22-0.29) and 2.1-5.6/10−6 K−1 (δ=0), which indicates the TEC of the stoichiometric Hex2 (δ=0.25) and P63 cm phase are approximately 8.4-11.6*10−6 K−1 and 2.1-5.6*100.6 K−1, respectively (FIG. 10a). The values of chemical expansion during loss of oxygen content are 0.82-3.48*10−2 mol−1 (FIG. 10B), which increase significantly with Dy content.


Previous reports of single crystal hexagonal RMnO3 materials (R=Y, Ho, Sc, and Lu) have shown to have lattice parameters that linearly increase in-plane and decrease along c with increasing temperature. The contraction of the c-axis has also been shown to increase for larger R ions. Thus, the effect of substantial contraction of the c-axis is responsible for the observed small change of volume of the unit cell and significantly lowers TE of the polycrystalline P63 cm material when compared to their Hex2 or perovskite phases (7.3*10−6 K−1 and 6*10-6 K−1 for the perovskite phase of DyMnO3 and YMnO3, respectively). It is also in agreement with the decrease of the net TE with increased Dy content for P63 cm materials as seen in FIG. 10A. This tendency is, however, reversed for the Hex2 phase, which shows to have increased TEC with increased Dy content. Finally, an increased rate of contraction along the c-axis at the Curie temperature, ˜650° C., was reported previously for YMnO3 and HoMnO3 in one study, but was also not observed in another report. No anomalous behavior near this temperature was observed; however, this effect can be beyond the sensitivity range of the dilatometer for a polycrystalline sample, where anisotropic effects are averaged out. On the other hand, if dense hexagonal RMnO3 materials are also prone to small non-stoichiometric behavior on heating, as seen here for the temperature range of 400-600° C. (0<δ<0.015), this effect can be due to the CE associated with the reduction of a slightly oxygenated sample to stoichiometric oxygen content. The measurements herein show the importance of understanding oxygen content behavior, as slight changes in oxygen content can have similar effects on the net expansion as structural changes, which are not associated with changes in oxygen content (e.g., the P63 cm to P63/mmc phase transition).


The CE during transition from the mixed state Hex2/P63 cm (˜85-100%, δ=0.22-0.25) materials to nearly single phase P63 cm has a much larger effect on total expansion than TE. The primary cause of the CE seen during the P63 cm/Hex2 transition is due to the change in ionic radius of the Mn(3+2δ)+ cation. Finally, for comparison, the CE values reported here are of the same order of magnitude as the CE associated with the absorption and desorption of oxygen in perovskite LaMnO3 or similar substituted perovskite manganites (˜2.4*10−2 mol−1 and ˜1-4*10−2 mol−1). However, the effect of CE for the hexagonal structure is much more prominent than in the perovskite phase, due to the larger change in oxygen content occurring over a much narrower temperature range.


CONCLUSIONS

The results and previous work with perovskite manganites show that the increasingly stronger reducing conditions are needed to form hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ with decreasing x (for x≦0.7). Previous reports of synthesis of the perovskite phase from the hexagonal phase with smaller rare-earths (Ho, Er, and Y) under high-pressure, support the argument that transformations occur at specific values of the tolerance factor due to the temperature, oxygen non-stoichiometry, and compressibility dependence of the (R—O) and (Mn—O) bonds lengths. Hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+δ materials were observed to reversibly absorb large amounts of oxygen at ˜200-300° C. and to sharply desorb this uptake of oxygen during transition back to the stoichiometric P63 cm phase above ˜275-375° C. or lower temperatures in lower partial-pressures of oxygen. Increased reversible changes in oxygen content were achieved by annealing at high-pressures (δ=0.25-0.35) and with hydrogen reduction at 400° C. (δ=−0.12-−0.20), which, if combined, can yield reversible oxygen storage capacities up to ˜2650 μmol-O/g. Rates of oxygen absorption were also observed to significantly decrease with increasing yttrium content. The non-stoichiometric oxygen content of these hexagonal manganites no doubt has profound influence on their multiferroic properties.


REFERENCES

Shelley, S. Chem. Eng. Prog. 2009, 105, 6.


Ka{hacek over (s)}par, J.; Fornasiero, P.; Hickey, N. Catal. Today 2003, 77, 419.


Kodama, T.; Gokon, N. Chem. Rev. 2007, 107, 4048.


Xu, Z.; Qi, Z.; Kaufman, A. Power Sources 2003, 115, 40.


Sakakini, B.; Taufig-Yap, Y.; Waugh, K. J. Catal. 2000, 189, 253.


Ciferno, J.; et al. DOE/NETL-2007/12912007.


Rydén, M.; Lyngfelt, A.; Mattisson, T.; Chen, D.; Holmen, A.; Bjøgum, E. I. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2008, 2, 21.


Klara, J.; et al. DOE/NEIL-2008/13072007.


Readman, J.; Olafsen, A.; Larring, Y.; Blom, R. Mater. Chem. 2005, 15, 1937.


Figueroa, J.; Fout, T.; Plasynski, S.; Mcllvried, H.; Srivastava, R. I. J. of Greenhouse Gas Control 2008, 2, 9.


Pei, S.; Kleefisch, M.; Kobylinski, T.; Faber, J.; Udovich, C.; Zhang-McCoy, V.;


Dabrowski, B.; Balachandran, U.; Mieville, R.; Poeppel, R. Cata. Lett. 1995, 30, 201.


He, H.; Dai, H. X.; Au, C. T. Catal. Today 2004, 90, 245.


DiMonte, R.; Fornasiero, P.; Graziani, M.; Ka{hacek over (s)}par, J. J. Alloys and Comp. 1998, 275, 887.


Nagai, Y; Yamamoto, T.; Tanaka, T.; Yoshida, S.; Nonaka, T.; Okamoto, T.; Suda, A.; Sugiura, M. Catal. Today 2002, 74, 225.


Singh, P.; Hegde, M.; Gopalakrishnan, J. Chem. Mater. 2008, 20, 7268.


Karppinen, M.; Yamauchi, H.; Otani, S.; Fujita, T.; Motohashi, T.; Huang, Y.; Valkeapää, M.; Fjellvag, H. Chem. Mater. 2006, 18, 490.


Motohashi, T.; Kadota, S.; Fjellvag, H.; Karppinen, M.; Yamauchi, H. Mater. Sci. Eng. 82008, 148, 196.


Kadota, S.; Karppinen, M.; Motohashi, T.; Yamauchi, H. Chem. Mater. 2008, 20, 6378.


Räsänen, S.; Motohashi, T.; Yamauchi, H; Karppinen, M. J. Solid State Chem. 2010, 183, 692.


Chmaissem, O.; Zhen, H.; Huq, A.; Stephens, P.; Mitchell, J. J. Solid State Chem. 2008, 181, 664.


Rydén M.; Lyngfelt, A.; Mattisson T.; Chen, D.; Holmen, A.; Bjørgum, E. I. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 2008, 2, 21.


Readman, J.; Olafsen, A.; Larring, Y.; Blom, R. J. Mater. Chem. 2005, 15, 1937.


Motohashi, T.; Ueda, T.; Masubuchi, Y.; Takiguchi, M.; Setoyama, T.; Oshima, K.; Kikkawa, S. Chem. Mater. 2010, 22, 3192.


Yakel, H. L.; Koehler, W.; Bertaut, E.; Forrat, E. Acta. Cryst. 1962, 16, 957.


Yakel, H. L. Acta. Cryst. 1955, 8, 394.


Shannon, R. D. Acta. Cryst. A 1976, 32, 751.


Yakel, H. L.; Koehler, W. C.; Bertaut, E. F.; Forrat, E. F. Acta. Cryst. 1963, 16, 957.


Dabrowski, B.; Chmaissem, O.; Mais, J.; Kolesnik, S.; Jorgensen, J. D.; Short, S. J. Solid State Chem. 2003, 170, 154.


Dabrowski, B.; Kolesnik, S.; Baszczuk, A.; Chmaissem, O.; Maxwell, T; Mais, J. J. Solid State Chem. 2005, 178, 629.


Kamegashira, N.; Satoh, H.; Ashizuka, S. Mater. Sci. Forum 2004, 449, 1045.


Park, J.; Park, J. G.; Jeon, G. S; Choi, H. Y.; Lee, C.; Jo, W.; Bewley, R.; McEwen, K. A.; Perring, T. G. Phys. Rev. 82003, 68, 104426.


Lee, S.; Pirogov, A.; Han, J. H.; Park, J. G.; Hoshikawa, A.; Kamiyama, T. Phys. Rev. 82005, 71, 180413(R).


Ivanov, V. Y.; Mukhin, A. A.; Prokhorov, A. S.; Balbashov, A. M; Iskhakova, L. D. Phys. Solid State 2006, 48, 1726.


Carp, O.; Patron, L.; lanculescu, A.; Pasuk, J.; Olar, R. J. Alloys and Comp. 2003, 351, 314.


Szabo, G.; Paris, R. A. Seances Academy Sci. C 1969, 268, 517.


Brinks, H. W.; Fjellvag, H.; Kjekshus, A. J. Solid State Chem. 1997, 129, 334.


Suescun, L.; Dabrowski, B.; Mais, J.; Remsen, S.; Richardson Jr., J. W.; Maxey, E. R.; Jorgensen, J. D. Chem. Mater. 2008, 4, 1636.


Zhou, J. S.; Goodenough, J. B.; Gallardo-Amores, J. M.; Morán, E.; Alario-Franco, M. A.; Caudillo, R. Phys. Rev. 82006, 74, 014422.


Waintal, A. J. Chenavas 1967, 2, 819.


Tachibana, M.; Shimoyama, T.; Kawaji, H.; Atake, T.; Takayama-Muromachi, E. Phys. Rev. 82007, 75, 144425.


Uusi-Esko, K.; Malm, J.; Imamura, N.; Yanauchi, H.; Karppinen, M. Mat. Chem. Phys. 2008, 112, 1029.


Lonkai, Th.; Tomuta, D. G.; Amann, U.; Ihringer, J.; Hendrikx, R. W. A.; Többens, D. M.; Mydosh, J. A. Phys. Rev. 82004, 69, 134108.


Jeong, I.; Hur, N.; Proffen, T. J. App. Cryst. 2007, 40, 730.


Kamata, K.; Nakajima, T.; Nakamura, T. Mat. Res. Bull. 1979, 14, 1007.


Katsufuji, T.; Masaki, M.; Machida, A.; Moritomo, M.; Kato, K.; Nishibori, E.; Takata, M.; Sakata, M.; Ohoyama, K.; Kitazawa, K.; Takagi, H. Phys. Rev. 82002, 66, 134434.


Zhou, J. S.; Goodenough, J. B.; Gallardo-Amores, J. M.; Moran, E.; Alario-Franco, M. A.; Caudillo, R. Phys. Rev. 82006, 74, 014422.


Fiebig, M.; Lottermoser, T.; Pisarev, R. V. Appl. Phys. 2003, 93, 8194.


Vajik, O. P.; Kenzelmann, M.; Lynn, J. W.; Kim, S. B.; Cheong, S. W. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2005, 94, 087601.


Lonkai, Th.; Tomuta, D. G.; Amann, U.; Ihringer, J.; Hendrikx, R. W. A.; Többens, D. M.; Mydosh, J. A. Phys. Rev. 82004, 69, 134108.


Jeong, I.; Hur, N.; Proffen, T. App. Cryst. 2007, 40, 730.


Rao, C. N. R.; Serrao, C. R. Mater. Chem. 2007, 17, 4931.


Choi, W. S.; Kim, D. G.; Seo, S. S. A.; Moon, S. J.; Lee, D.; Lee, J. H.; Lee, H. S.; Cho, D. Y.; Lee, Y. S.; Murugavel, P.; Yu, J.; Noh, T. W. Phys. Rev. 82008, 77, 045137.


Nandi, S.; Kreyssig, A.; Yan, J.; Vannette, M.; Lang, J.; Tan, L.; Kim, J.; Prozorov, R.; Lograsso, T.; McQueeny, R.; Goldman, A. Phys. Rev. 82008, 78, 075118.


Dabrowski, B.; Klamut, P. W.; Bukowski, Z.; Dybzinski, R.; Siewenie, J. E. J. Solid State Chem. 1999, 144, 461.


Bukowski, Z.; Dabrowski, B.; Mais, J.; Klamut, P. W.; Kolesnik, S.; Chmaissem, O. J. App. Phys. 2000, 9, 5031.


Zhou, H. D.; Denyszyn, J. C.; Goodenough, J. B. Phys. Rev. 82005, 72, 224401.


Remsen, S. Ph.D. Dissertation, Northern Illinois University, 2010.


Fu, B.; Huebner, W. Mater. Res. 1994, 9, 2645.


Chen, X.; Yu, J.; Adler, S. B. Chem. Mater. 2005, 17, 4537.


Miyoshi, S.; Hong, J.; Yashiro, K.; Kaimai, A.; Nigara, Y.; Kawamura, K.; Kawada, T.; Mizusaki, J. Solid State Ionics, 2003, 161, 209.


McIntosh, S.; Vente, J. F.; Haije, W. G.; Blank, D.; Bouwmeester, H. Chem. Mater. 2006, 18, 2187.

Claims
  • 1. A method of preparing oxygen, comprising: separating oxygen from a mixture of gases containing the oxygen, by conducting the oxygen through a manganese oxide, or absorbing and releasing the oxygen from the manganese oxide, wherein the manganese oxide comprises M1, optionally M2, Mn and O, andwherein M1 is selected from the group consisting of In, Sc, Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu,M2 is different from M1, and M2 is selected from the group consisting of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu, Mn and O are present in an atomic ratio of 1:z, and z is at least 3.15, andthe separating is carried out at a temperature of at most 400° C.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, wherein z is at least 3.2.
  • 3. The method of claim 1, wherein z is 3.15 to 3.4.
  • 4. The method of claim 1, wherein M1 and M2 are present in an atomic ratio of x:1−x, and x =0.1 to 1.
  • 5. The method of claim 4, wherein x =0.3 to 1.
  • 6. The method of claim 1, wherein M1 is selected from the group consisting of Y and Ho.
  • 7. The method of claim 1, wherein M1 is Y and M2 is selected from the group consisting of La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb and Dy.
  • 8. The method of claim 1, wherein M1 is Y and M2 is Dy.
  • 9. The method of claim 5, wherein M1 and Mn are present in an atomic ratio of 1 :y, and 0 <y ≦10.
  • 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the separating is carried out at a temperature of at most 300° C.
  • 11. The method of claim 1, wherein the separating is carried out at a temperature of at most 250° C.
  • 12. The method of claim 1 wherein the formal oxidation state of Mn is between 3 and 4.
  • 13. The method of claim 12, wherein the formal oxidation state of Mn is 3.3 to 3. 8.
  • 14. The method of claim 1, wherein the method is thermal swing absorption or ceramic autothermal recovery.
  • 15. The method of claim 1, wherein z is 3.15 to 3.4, M1 and M2 are present in an atomic ratio of x:1−x, and x =0.3 to 1, andM1 and Mn are present in an atomic ratio of 1:y, and 0<y≦10.
  • 16. A method of generating electricity, comprising: (1) preparing oxygen by the method of claims 1, and(2) burning a carbon-containing fuel with the oxygen, in a generator or power plant.
  • 17. A method of preparing oxygen, comprising separating oxygen from a mixture of gases containing the oxygen, by conducting the oxygen through a manganese oxide, or absorbing and releasing the oxygen from the manganese oxide, wherein the manganese oxide comprises M1, M2, Mn and O, andwherein: M1 is selected from the group consisting of In, Sc, Y, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu,M2 is different from M1, and M2 is selected from the group consisting of Bi, In, Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb and Lu,M1 and M2 are present in an atomic ratio of x:1−x, and x =0.1 to 0.9,Mn and O are present in an atomic ratio of 1:z, and z >3, andthe separating is carried out at a temperature of at most 400° C.
  • 18. The method of claim 17, wherein z is at least 3.15.
  • 19. The method of claim 18, wherein z is at least 3.25.
  • 20. The method of claim 18, wherein z is 3.15 to 3.4.
  • 21. The method of claim 17, wherein x =0.3 to 0.9.
  • 22. The method of claim 17, wherein M2 is selected from the group consisting of La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb and Dy.
  • 23. The method of claim 17, wherein M1 is Y and M2 is Tb.
  • 24. The method of claim 17, wherein z is 3.15 to 3.4, x=0.3 to 0.9, andM1 and Mn are present in an atomic ratio of 1:y, and 0<y≦10.
  • 25. A method of generating electricity, comprising: (1) preparing oxygen by the method of claims 17, and(2) burning a carbon-containing fuel with the oxygen, in a generator or power plant.
  • 26. A method of preparing oxygen, comprising: separating oxygen from a mixture of gases containing the oxygen, by conducting the oxygen through an oxygen conducting membrane, wherein the oxygen conducting membrane comprises (1) a rare earth manganese oxide, and(2) a support material,the membrane has first and second opposing surfaces,the membrane is not permeable to nitrogen gas,the rare earth manganese oxide forms a contiguous structure exposed on both the first and second opposing surfaces, andthe rare earth manganese oxide has an average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, of at most 400° C., and a temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, of at most 400° C.
  • 27. The method of claim 26, wherein the support material comprises at least one member selected from the group consisting of an organic polymer, a silicone rubber, and glass.
  • 28. The method of claim 26, wherein the support material is electrically conductive, and forms a contiguous structure exposed on both the first and second opposing surfaces.
  • 29. The method of claim 28, wherein the support material comprises at least one member selected from the group consisting of graphite, carbon black, aluminum, copper, iron, nickel, steel, zinc, tin, lead and alloys thereof.
  • 30. The method of claim 26, wherein the average temperature of maximum oxygen absorption upon heating and cooling, TmaxA, is at most 300° C.
  • 31. The method of claim 26, wherein the temperature of maximum oxygen desorption, TmaxD, is at most 300° C.
  • 32. The method of claim 26, wherein the support material decomposes when exposed to air at a temperature of 500° C., or has a glass transition temperature or a melting point of at most 500° C.
  • 33. The method of claim 26, wherein the manganese oxide comprises Mn and O in an atomic ratio of 1:z, and z is 3.15 to 3.4.
  • 34. A method of generating electricity, comprising: (1) preparing oxygen by the method of claims 26, and(2) burning a carbon-containing fuel with the oxygen, in a generator or power plant.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application 61/407,580, filed 28 Oct. 2010, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference, except where inconsistent with the present application.

FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

This invention was made with Government support under grant no. DMR-0706610 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The United States Government has certain rights in this invention.

US Referenced Citations (18)
Number Name Date Kind
2490986 Symonds Dec 1949 A
2642340 Martin Jun 1953 A
3121611 Parker Feb 1964 A
3509694 Imai May 1970 A
3812048 Massey May 1974 A
5240480 Thorogood et al. Aug 1993 A
5478444 Liu Dec 1995 A
5824278 Yao Oct 1998 A
6059858 Lin May 2000 A
6582814 Swiler et al. Jun 2003 B2
7160360 Wu Jan 2007 B2
7338549 Bulow et al. Mar 2008 B2
7556676 Nagabhushana et al. Jul 2009 B2
8980213 Dabrowski et al. Mar 2015 B2
20090206297 Karppinen et al. Aug 2009 A1
20090220779 Doerr et al. Sep 2009 A1
20100278719 Lambert Nov 2010 A1
20120118149 Dabrowski et al. May 2012 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
101609889 Dec 2009 CN
2012058644 May 2012 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (73)
Entry
Mailed Feb. 12, 2012, Application No. PCT/US2011/058471.
Mailed May 9, 2014, U.S. Appl. No. 13/284,847.
Mailed Jul. 18, 2014, U.S. Appl. No. 13/284,847.
Mailed Aug. 4, 2014, U.S. Appl. No. 13/284,847.
Mailed Nov. 3, 2014, U.S. Appl. No. 13/284,847.
Motohashi, T. et al., “Uncommon oxygen intake/release capability of layered cobalt oxides, REBaCo4O7+5: Novel oxygen-storage materials”, Materials Science and Engineering B, vol. 148, pp. 196-198, (2008).
Shelley, S., “Oxygen and nitrogen: onward and upward”, Chemical Engineering Progress, vol. 105, No. 1, pp. 1-4, (2009).
Ka{hacek over (s)}par, J. et al., “Automotive catalytic converters: current status and some perspectives”, Catalysis Today, vol. 77, pp. 419-449, (2003).
Kodama, T. et al., “Thermochemical cycles for high-temperature solar hydrogen production”, Chemical Reviews, vol. 107, No. 10, pp. 4048-4077, (2007).
Xu, Z. et al., “Effect of oxygen storage materials on the performance of proton-exchange membrane fuel cells”, Journal of Power Sources, vol. 115, pp. 40-43, (2003).
Sakakini, B.H. et al., “A study of the kinetics and mechanism of the adsorption and anaerobic partial oxidation of n-butane over a vanadyl pyrophosphate catalyst”, Journal of Catalysis, vol. 189, pp. 253-262, (2000).
Ciferno, J., “Pulverized Coal Oxycombustion Power Plants: vol. 1: Bituminous coal to electricity”, National Energy Technology Laboratory, Final Report, pp. 1-315, DOE/NETL-2007/1291, (2008).
Rydén, M. et al., “Novel oxygen-carrier materials for chemical-looping combustion and chemical-looping reforming; LaxSr1−xFeyCo1−yO3−σ perovskites and mixed-metal oxides of NiO, Fe2O3 and Mn3O4”, International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control, vol. 2, pp. 21-36, (2008).
Klara, J.M., “Chemical-Looping process in a Coal-to-Liquids Configuration; Independent assessment of the potential of Chemical-Looping in the context of a Fischer-Tropsch Plant”, National Energy Technology Laboratory, pp. 1-15, DOE/NETL-2008/1307, (2007).
Readman, J.E. et al., “La0.8Sr0.2C00.2Fe0.8O3−σ as a potential oxygen carrier in a chemical looping type reactor, an in-situ powder X-ray diffraction study”, Journal of Materials Chemistry, vol. 15pp. 1931-1937, (2005).
Figueroa, J.D. et al., “Advances in CO2 capture technology—The U.S. Department of energy's carbon sequestration program”, International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control, vol. 2, pp. 9-20, (2008).
Pei, S. et al., “Failure mechanisms of ceramic membrane reactors in partial oxidation of methane to synthesis gas”, Catalysis Letters, vol. 30, pp. 201-212, (1995).
He, H. et al., “Defective structure, oxygen mobility, oxygen storage capacity, and redox properties of RE-based (RE=Ce, Pr) solid solutions”, Catalysis Today, vol. 90, pp. 245-254, (2004).
Di Monte, R. et al., “Oxygen storage and catalytic NO removal promoted by CeO2-containing mixed oxides”, Journal of Alloys and Compounds, vol. 275-277, pp. 877-885, (1998).
Nagai, Y. et al., “X-ray absorption fine structure analysis of local structure of CeO2—ZrO2 mixed oxides with the same composition ratio (Ce/Zr=1)”, Catalysis Today, vol. 74, pp. 225-234, (2002).
Singh, P. et al., “Ce2/3Cr1/3O2+y: A new oxygen storage material based on the fluorite structure”, Chemistry of Materials, vol. 20, pp. 7268-7273, (2008).
Karppinen, M. et al., “Oxygen nonstoichiometry in YBaCo4O7+σ: Large low-temperature oxygen absorption/desorption capability”, Chemistry of Materials, vol. 18, pp. 490-494, (2006).
Kadota, S. et al., “R-site substitution effect on the oxygen-storage capability of RBaCo4O7+σ”, Chemistry of Materials, vol. 20, pp. 6378-6381, (2008).
Räsänen, S. et al., “Stability and oxygen-storage characteristics of Al-substituted YBaCo4O7+σ”, Journal of Solid State Chemistry, vol. 183, pp. 692-695, (2010).
Chmaissem, O. et al., “Formation of Co3+ octahedra and tetrahedra in YBaCo4O8.1”, Journal of Solid State chemistry, vol. 181, pp. 664-672, (2008).
Motohashi, T. et al., “Remarkable oxygen intake/release capability of BaYMn2O5+σ: Applications to oxygen storage technologies” Chemistry of Materials, vol. 22, pp. 3192-3196, (2010).
Yakel, H.L. et al., “On the crystal structure of the manganese (III) trioxides of the heavy lanthanides and yttrium”, Acta Crystallographica, vol. 16, pp. 957-962, (1963).
Yakel Jr, H.L. “On the structures of some compounds of the perovskite type”, Acta Crystallographica, vol. 8, pp. 394-398, (1955).
Shannon, R.D. “Revised effective ionic radii and systematic studies of interatomic distances in halides and chalcogenides”, Acta Crystallographica, vol. A32, pp. 751-767, (1976).
Dabrowski, B. et al., “Tolerance factor rules for Sr1−x−yCaxBayMnO3 perovskites”, Journal of Solid State Chemistry, vol. 170, pp. 154-164, (2003).
Dabrowski, B. et al., “Structural, transport, and magnetic properties of RMnO3 perovskites (R=La, Pr, Nd, Sm, 153Eu, Dy)”, Journal of Solid State Chemistry, vol. 178, pp. 629-637, (2005).
Kamegashira, N. et al., “Synthesis and crystal structure of hexagonal DyMnO3” Materials Science Forum vols. 449-452, pp. 1045-1048, (2004).
Park, J. et al., “Magnetic ordering and spin-liquid state of YMnO3”, Physical Review B, vol. 68, pp. 104426-1-104426-6, (2003).
Lee, S. et al., “Direct observation of a coupling between spin, lattice and electric dipole moment in multiferroic YMnO3”, Physical Review B, vol. 71, pp. 180413-1-180413-4, (2005).
Ivanov, V.Y. et al., “Magnetic properties and phase transitions in hexagonal DyMnO3 single crystals”, Physics of the Solid State, vol. 48, No. 9, pp. 1726-1729, (2006).
Carp, O. et al., “New synthesis routes for obtaining dysprosium manganese perovskites”, Journal of Alloys and Compounds, vol. 351, pp. 314-318, (2003).
Brinks, H.W. et al., “Synthesis of metastable perovskite-type YMnO3 and HoMnO3”, Journal of Solid State Chemistni, vol. 129, pp. 334-340, (1997).
Suescun, L. et al., “Oxygen ordered phases in LaxSr1−xMnOy (0 ≲ x ≲ 0.2, 2.5 ≲ y ≲ 3): An in situ neutron powder diffraction study”, Chemistry of Materials, vol. 20, No. 4, pp. 1636-1645, (2008).
Zhou, J-S. et al., “Hexagonal versus perovskite phase of manganite RMnO3 (R=Y, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu)”, Physical Review B, vol. 74, pp. 014422-1-014422-7, (2006).
Waintal, A. et al., “Transformation sous haute pression de la forme hexagonale de MnT1O3 (T1=Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu) en une forme perovskite”, Materials Research Bulletin, vol. 2, pp. 819-822, (1967).
Tachibana, M. et al., “Jahn-teller distortion and magnetic transitions in perovskite RMnO3 (R=Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu)”, Physical Review B, vol. 75, pp. 144425-1-144425-5, (2007).
Uusi-Esko, K. et al., “Characterization of RMnO3 (R=Sc, Y, Dy-Lu): High-pressure synthesized metastable perovskites and their hexagonal precursor phases”, Materials Chemistry and Physics, vol. 112, pp. 1029-1034, (2008).
Lonkai, T. et al., “Development of the high-temperature phase of hexagonal manganites”, Physical Review B, vol. 69, pp. 134108-1-134108-10, (2004).
Jeong, I-K. et al., “High-temperature structural evolution of hexagonal multiferroic YMnO3 and YbMnO3”; Journal of Applied Crystallography, vol. 40, pp. 730-734, (2007).
Kamata, K. et al., “Thermogravimetric study of rare earth manganites AMnO3 (A=Sm, Dy, Y, Er, Yb) at 1200° C.”, Materials Research Bulletin, vol. 14, issue 8, pp. 1007-1012, (1979).
Katsufuji, T. et al., “Crystal structure and magnetic properties of hexagonal RMnO3 (R=Y, Lu, and Sc) and the effect of doping”, Physical Review B, vol. 66, pp. 134434-1-134434-8, (2002).
Fiebig, M. et al., “Spin-rotation phenomena and magnetic phase diagrams of hexagonal RMnO3”, Journal of Applied Physics, vol. 93, No. 10, pp. 8194-8196, (2003).
Vajk, O.P. et al., “Magnetic order and spin dynamics in ferroelectric HoMnO3”, Physical Review Letters, vol. 94, pp. 087601-1-087601-4, (2005).
Rao, C.N.R. et al., “New routes to multiferroics”, Journal of Materials Chemistry, vol. 17, pp. 4931-4938, (2007).
Choi, W.S. et al., “Electronic structures of hexagonal RMnO3 (R=Gd, Tb, Dy, and Ho) thin films: Optical spectroscopy and first-principles calculations”, Physical Review B, vol. 77, pp. 045137-1-045137-7, (2008).
Nandi, S. et al., “Magnetic structure of Dy3+, in hexagonal multiferroic DyMnO3”, Physical Review B, vol. 78, pp. 075118-1-075118-5, (2008).
Dabrowski, B. et al., “Effective oxygen content and properties of La0.74Ca0.26MnO3+d as a function of synthesis conditions”, Journal of Solid State Chemistry, vol. 144, pp. 461-466, (1999).
Bukowski, Z. et al., “Effect of oxygen stoichiometry on properties of La0.815Sr0.185MnO3+d”; Journal of Applied Physics, vol. 87, No. 9, pp. 5031-5033, (2000).
Zhou, H.D. et al., “Effect of Ga doping on the multiferroic properties of RMn1−xGaxO3 (R=Ho,Y)”, Physical Review B, vol. 72, pp. 224401-1-224401-5, (2005).
Remsen, S. “Properties of transition metal oxides for gas separation and oxygen storage applications”, Dissertation, Northern Illinois University, pp. 1-118, (2010).
Fu, B. et al., “Synthesis and properties of strontium-doped yttrium manganite”, Journal of Materials Research, vol. 9, No. 10, pp. 2645-2653, (1994).
Chen, X. et al., “Thermal and chemical expansion of Sr-doped lanthanum cobalt oxide (La1−xSrxCoO3−σ)”, Chemistry of Materials, vol. 17, No. 17, pp. 4537-4546, (2005).
Miyoshi, S. et al., “Lattice expansion upon reduction of perovskite-type LaMnO3 with oxygen-deficit nonstoichiometry”, Solid State Ionics, vol. 161, pp. 209-217, (2003).
McIntosh, S. et al., “Oxygen stoichiometry and chemical expansion of Ba0.5Sr0.5Co0.8Fe0.2O3−σ measured by in situ neutron diffraction”, Chemistry of Materials, vol. 18, No. 8, pp. 2187-2193, (2006).
“Development of ion transport membrane (ITM) oxygen technology for integration in IGCC and other advanced power generation systems”, National Energy Technology Laboratory, project 136, 2 pages, found at netl.doe.gov/publications/factsheets/project/Proj136.pdf, (2009).
Foy, K. et al., “Comparison of ion transport membranes”, National Energy Technology Laboratory, Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Conference on Carbon Capture and Sequestration Doe/Netl, pp. 1-11, May 2-5, 2005.
Brunetti, A. et al., “Membrane technologies for CO2 separation” Journal of Membrane Science, vol. 359, pp. 115-125, (2010).
Shelley, S., “Capturing CO2: Membrane systems move forward”, Chemical Engineering Progress, vol. 105, No. 4, pp. 42-47, (2009).
Cooper, H.W., “Producing electricity and chemicals simultaneously”, Chemical Engineering Progress, vol. 106, No. 2, pp. 24-32, (2010).
Remsen, S. et al., “Synthesis and oxygen content dependent properties of hexagonal DyMnO3+σ” Journal of Solid State Chemistry, vol. 184, pp. 2306-2314, (2011).
Dabrowski, B. et al., “Synthesis and characterization of non-stoichiometric hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+σ” Functional Materials Letters, vol. 4, issue 2, pp. 147-150, (2011).
Remsen, S. et al., “Synthesis and oxygen storage capacities of hexagonal Dy1−xYxMnO3+σ” Chemistry of Materials, vol. 23, No. 17, pp. 3818-3827, (2011).
International Search Report dated Feb. 2, 2012 for PCT application No. PCT/US2011/058471.
Imamura, N. et al., “Magnetic dilution in the frustrated ferromagnetic pyrochlore system, (Dy1−xLux) 2Mn2O7” Solid State Communications, vol. 144, pp. 98-102, (2007).
Imamura, N. et al., “Magnetic properties of R2Mn2O7 pyrochlore rare-earth solid solutions”, Physical Review B, vol. 82, pp. 132407.1-132407.4, (2010).
Subramanian, M.A. et al., “Ferromagnetic R2Mn2O7 pyrochlores (R=Dy-Lu, Y)”, Journal of Solid State Chemistry, vol. 72, pp. 24-30, (1988).
“Air separation technology-ion transport membrane (ITM)” Air Products and Chemicals, Inc., 4 pages, found at www.airproducts.com/˜/media/Downloads/Article/Literature—Cryogenic-Air-Separation-ITM-28007017GLB.ashx (2010).
Sallavuard, G. et al., “Sur les monogallates lunthanidiques LnGaO3. note”, C. R. Academy of Science Paris, Series C, vol. 268, pp. 1050-1053, (1969). (including English translation of abstract).
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20150251955 A1 Sep 2015 US
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
61407580 Oct 2010 US
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 13284847 Oct 2011 US
Child 14657263 US