Disorder, short-range order, and defect interactions in thermodynamic modeling from first-principles
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Real materials are rarely ideal, perfectly ordered crystals. Instead, materials properties, behavior, and functionality are usually influenced, if not determined, by defects, doping, and disorder. Moreover, these non-idealities often do not observe the completely random atomic distributions that underpin simple thermodynamic models. Instead, short-range order can often cause significant contributions to both enthalpy and entropy, creating both challenges and opportunities for modeling based on first-principles total energy calculations. This presentation will review recent works that approach this issue from different angles and attempt to integrate the different perspectives into a coherent picture, including: [1] Atomic site disorder in non-equilibrium synthesis of ZnGeN2, modeled by cluster-expansion Monte-Carlo (MC) simulations. [2] Heterostructural phase diagram of (Cd,Zn)3As2 topological semimetals, where short range order effects are accounted for by thermodynamic integration of first-principles MC with model functions. [3] Predicting the reduction behavior of highly off-stoichiometric (Sr,Ce)MnO3-δ perovskites via free energy contributions due to defect interactions.
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Publication: [1] J.J. Cordell, J. Pan, A.C. Tamboli, G.J. Tucker, S. Lany, Phys. Rev. Mater. 5, 024604 (2021)<br>[2] C. Brooks and S. Lany, Phys. Rev. Mater. 8, L061201 (2024)<br>[3] A. Goyal, M.D. Sanders, R.P. O'Hayre, S. Lany, PRX Energy 3, 013008 (2024)
Presenters
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Stephan Lany
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)
Authors
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Stephan Lany
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)