Abstract

Anhydrous mixtures of lithium acetate and sodium acetate were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray powder diffraction. A tentative phase diagram is derived from these data. The Li1-xNaxCH3COO system has a eutectic for the NaCH3COO molar fraction of x≈0.55. The relatively low eutectic melting point at 448 K (175 ∘C) may make this composition an interesting molten salt solvent. Peritectic reactions correspond to phases with compositions near Li4Na(CH3COO)5 and LiNa3(CH3COO)4. On the Li-rich side of the eutectic, the system, prepared as a glass, can crystallized deliberately. This allows checking the data validity with the first law of thermodynamics. The stability range of the supercooled liquid increases with x up to Li0.55Na0.45CH3COO. For higher sodium concentrations, the samples remain mixtures of glass and crystalline phases, with the amount of the vitreous component decreasing linearly from x = 0.45 to x = 1. The fragility of the liquid state, highest for pure LiCH3COO, decreases by a factor of two over the range 0<x<0.2, and remains constant for higher x.

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