NASICON-based solid
electrolytes with exceptionally high Na-ion
conductivities are considered to enable future all solid-state Na-ion
battery technologies. Despite 40 years of research the interrelation
between crystal structure and Na-ion conduction is still controversially
discussed and far from being fully understood. In this study, microcontact
impedance spectroscopy combined with single crystal X-ray diffraction,
and differential scanning calorimetry is applied to tackle the question
how bulk Na-ion conductivity σbulk of sub-mm-sized
flux grown Na3Sc2(PO4)3 (NSP) single crystals is influenced by supposed phase changes (α,
β, and γ phase) discussed in literature. Although we found
a smooth structural change at around 140 °C, which we assign
to the β → γ phase transition, our conductivity
data follow a single Arrhenius law from room temperature (RT) up to
220 °C. Obviously, the structural change, being mainly related
to decreasing Na-ion ordering with increasing temperature, does not
cause any jumps in Na-ion conductivity or any discontinuities in activation
energies Ea. Bulk ion dynamics in NSP
have so far rarely been documented; here, under ambient conditions,
σbulk turned out to be as high as 3 × 10–4 S cm–1 at RT (Ea, bulk = 0.39 eV) when directly measured with microcontacts
for individual small single crystals.