Crystal Features Controlling Oxygen Vacancy Formation in ABO<sub>3</sub> Perovskites
ORAL
Abstract
The control of oxygen vacancy (VO) formation could unlock significant advances in perovskite metal oxide technologies including solar thermochemical fuel and electrochemical fuel/electricity production, multiferroic computer memory, and others. Despite the critical role played by VOs in determining the performance of such perovskite-oxide-based processes and devices, and the research attention they have garnered over the past few decades, an optimally simple, instructive, and efficient model for their quantitative assessment has been elusive. Here, we introduce a compact linear model for the VO formation energies of ABO3 perovskites, where A = {Ca, Sr, Ba, Ce, and La} and B = {Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, and Ni}, in six lattice systems (monoclinic, orthorhombic, tetragonal, rhombohedral, hexagonal, and cubic). The model takes as inputs crystal bond dissociation energies, crystal reduction potentials, band gaps, and energies above the convex hull, which can be obtained from theoretical or experimental databases. Additionally, we demonstrate that the model can be simplified, with acceptable losses in accuracy, such that only crystal bond dissociation energies and crystal reduction potentials are needed. Finally, we present our perspectives on how to improve and extend the model, which already provides both accurate and efficient predictions for high-throughput screening and an intuitive and modular phenomenology for renewable energy applications of metal oxide perovskites and beyond.
*The authors gratefully acknowledge research support from the HydroGEN Advanced Water Splitting Materials Consortium, established as part of the Energy Materials Network under the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Fuel Cell Technologies Office, under Award Number DE-EE0008090.
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Publication: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.1c05570
Presenters
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Robert B Wexler
- Princeton University