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Deciphering Anion Order in Oxysulfide Perovskites: Origins and Implications

ORAL

Abstract

Perovskite compounds—with a generic formula of ABX3— represent a versatile class of materials exhibiting tremendous synthetic flexibility and technological applications. Going beyond “single” perovskites, two or more species can occupy each sublattice. While origins and design rules of cation ordering in perovskites are well known, anion ordering in heteroanionic perovskites remains a largely uncharted territory. This talk will share insights from a first principles analysis of anion-ordered AB(O0.5S0.5)3 oxysulfide chemistries, studied in all possible anion configurations, with A=Ca,Sr,Ba and B=Ti,Zr,Hf. We find that the stable local ordering is always an all-cis arrangement (i.e., a fac-type ordering) in each BO3S3 octahedron, stabilized by a combination of electronic, strain and electrostatic interactions. We further study the relative stability of this ordering as a function of A and B site chemistries and probe its effect on the electronic structure. Most remarkably, we show that the ground state anion ordering breaks inversion symmetry to create a family of polar oxysulfides with polarization >30 µC/cm2, exhibiting a significant promise for electronic applications.

Presenters

  • Steven Hartman

    Institute of Materials Science and Engineering, Washington University, St. Louis

Authors

  • Steven Hartman

    Institute of Materials Science and Engineering, Washington University, St. Louis

  • Ayana Ghosh

    Univ of Connecticut - Storrs, Materials Science and Engineering, University of Connecticut, University of Connecticut

  • Rohan Mishra

    Washington University in St. Louis, Washington University, St. Louis, Institute of Materials Science and Engineering, Washington University, St. Louis, Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science, Washington University in St. Louis, washington university in st. louis

  • Christopher Stanek

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, Materials Science and Technology Division, Los Alamos National Lab

  • Blas Pedro Uberuaga

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, Materials Science and Technology Division, Los Alamos National Lab

  • Ghanshyam Pilania

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, Materials Science and Technology Division, Los Alamos National Lab