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.
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