Simple point-ion electrostatic model explains the cation ordering in A2BO4 spinel oxides

ORAL

Abstract

The A2BO4 spinel oxides are distinguished by having either a normal or an inverse distribution of the A, B cations over the octahedrally and tetrahedrally coordinated sites. While normal spinel represents a single structure (A-octahedral, B-tetrahedral) the inverse spinel is similar to a 50-50 alloy with octahedral sublattice occupied randomly by A and B. We show that a simple point-ion electrostatic (PIE) model parameterized by the oxygen displacement parameter u and by the relative formal cation valencies ZA vs ZB provides a simple rule: if ZA$>$ZB the structure is normal for u$>$0.2592 and inverse for u$<$0.2578, while if ZA$<$ZB the structure is normal for u$<$0.2550 and inverse for u$>$0.2578. This rule is illustrated for the known spinel oxides, proving to be 98 \% successful (PRL 105, 075501). Moreover, in inverse spinels the PIE model also explains the origin of the experimentally observed ordered phase that emerges from the random alloy at low T.

*This work was supported through the Center for Inverse Design, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences.

Authors

  • Vladan Stevanovic

    • NREL, Golden CO
  • Mayeul d&#039;Avezac

    • NREL, Golden CO
  • Alex Zunger

    • National Renewable Energy Laboratory
    • NREL, Golden CO
    • National Renewable Energy Lab