Thomas E. Karis, C. Mark Seymour, et al.
Rheologica Acta
Raman measurements are reported in the superionic conductor AgI far below and above the transition temperature Tc=147 °C. At Tc, the crystal structure changes from the low-temperature wurtzite phase to a disordered-defect body-centered cubic structure (α phase) and the conductivity increases ≅ 104 (Ωcm)-1. Large abrupt reversible changes in the phonon spectra are observed at Tc. Assuming a frequency-independent matrix element, which seems reasonable for a disordered-defect structure, we have interpreted the experimental data in terms of a frequency-dependent conductivity, σ(ω). This σ(ω) compares favorably with two published infrared results. However, the infrared results differ from each other in the low-frequency region (3-20 cm-1). The Raman results show much lower σ(ω) in this low-frequency region, in agreement with one of the infrared results, and some theories (but in disagreement with other theories). The measurements show that σ(ω) varies very little to 400 °C, and suggest that in the α phase the Ag+ probably occupies the tetrahedral sites for a large fraction of the time. © 1977 The American Physical Society.
Thomas E. Karis, C. Mark Seymour, et al.
Rheologica Acta
Michiel Sprik
Journal of Physics Condensed Matter
Imran Nasim, Melanie Weber
SCML 2024
Lawrence Suchow, Norman R. Stemple
JES