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Optimizing proton conductivity in zirconates through defect engineering Andrew J. E. Rowberg, Leigh Weston, and Chris G. Van de Walle ACS Appl. Energy Mater., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.8b02222 • Publication Date (Web): 12 Mar 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 17, 2019
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
Optimizing proton conductivity in zirconates through defect engineering †
Andrew J. E. Rowberg,
†Materials
Leigh Weston,
†,‡
and Chris G. Van de Walle
∗,†
Department, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106-5050, United States
‡Energy
Technologies Area, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Rd, Berkeley, California 94720, United States
* E-mail:
[email protected] Abstract
Introduction
The alkaline-earth zirconates (CaZrO3 , SrZrO3 ,
Hydrogen is an attractive source of clean and
and BaZrO3 ) are under active investigation as
renewable energy. It is the most abundant el-
solid-state electrolytes in hydrogen fuel cells.
ement in the universe and oers roughly three
Their performance as proton conductors de-
times more chemical energy per mass than other
pends critically on the properties of accep-
chemical fuels, including natural gas, petrol,
tor
and coal.
dopants.
calculations and
point
Here, to
study
defects
in
we the
use role
rst-principles of
acceptors
incorporating
1,2
Electrochemical devices that use
hydrogen for energy applications require elec-
protons
trolytes with high hydrogen conductivity. For
through an oxygen-vacancy-mediated process.
high-temperature applications, it is necessary
For CaZrO3 , we nd that ZrCa antisites sup-
to use solid-state electrolytes, which are more
press formation of oxygen vacancies. Other in-
thermally stable than polymer electrolyte mem-
trinsic point defects are shown not to hinder
branes,;
performance.
ides are most promising.
Common unintentional impuri-
3
among these, proton-conducting ox-
46
The most widely
ties, such as N and C, are not good accep-
researched
tors but can incorporate in other congurations.
ABO3 perovskite crystal structure, which fa-
Our results show that the eectiveness of com-
cilitates fast proton hopping between nearby
mon dopants such as Sc and Y is limited by self-
O atoms.
compensation due to their incorporation on the
garded as the best proton-conducting oxide in
wrong cation site, where they act as donors.
terms of chemical stability and ionic conductiv-
We demonstrate that using alkali metal dopants
ity.
overcomes this problem, as the formation en-
(CaZrO3 ) and strontium zirconate (SrZrO3 ),
ergy of compensating donors is very high. Al-
also have attracted interest as proton conduc-
kali metal dopants also have low binding en-
tors,
ergies for protons, reducing their tendency to
commercial hydrogen gas sensors.
act as traps and hence enhancing proton conductivity.
7,8
of
these
materials
take
on
the
Barium zirconate (BaZrO3 ) is re-
Its related compounds, calcium zirconate
9
and CaZrO3 has been adopted for use in
6,10,11
Protons are incorporated into the zirconates
Our guidelines for choosing accep-
by creating oxygen vacancies during synthesis
tor dopants and optimizing synthesis conditions
and then exposing to water, leading to the re-
can greatly improve the ecacy of these proton-
action:
6
VO+2 + H2 O → 2H+ .
conducting oxides as solid-state electrolytes.
(1)
The as-grown material therefore needs to con-
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Page 2 of 18
tain a high concentration of oxygen vacancies,
they would act as donors.
which is accomplished by doping with acceptor
ies have reported that K and Rb can enhance
impurities. Trivalent group-IIIB metals such as
proton conductivity in BaZrO3 ,
Y and Sc are most commonly used.
sults address the underlying reasons for this im-
6
When sub-
stituting on the tetravalent Zr site, these ele-
Some recent stud-
1316
and our re-
provement.
ments act as acceptors. However, there is some
We use rst-principles techniques based on
probability that they will incorporate on the
density functional theory (DFT) with a hybrid
divalent A site, where they act as donors, thus
functional to obtain a reliable description of
suppressing the intended formation of oxygen
atomic and electronic structure.
vacancies. We previously identied this wrong-
native point defects, including vacancies, cation
site incorporation as a problem in SrZrO3 ,
antisite defects, and self-interstitials. We then
12
We analyze
and one goal of the present study is to exam-
examine acceptor doping by studying substitu-
ine the degree to it also occurs in CaZrO3 and
tion on the A, B, and O lattice sites. For the
BaZrO3 .
alkali metals, and for C and N, we also consider
Another goal is to determine whether or not
incorporation on interstitial sites. We also ex-
oxygen vacancies are in fact the most prevalent
amine the tendency of the candidate dopants
donors in these systems. Other acceptors, such
to bind protons; strong binding causes the ac-
as cation antisite defects or self-interstitials,
ceptors to act as traps, thus reducing proton
could form as the dominant donor species and
conductivity.
in the process suppress the formation of oxygen
Previous rst-principles studies have exam-
vacancies. We nd that cation antisites (ZrCa )
ined some of the intrinsic and extrinsic defect
are low in energy in CaZrO3 .
properties of the alkaline-earth zirconates.
Under Zr-rich
conditions, they also form in SrZrO3 .
1521
Thus,
However, our report is the rst to apply hy-
doping CaZrO3 with acceptors will not lead to
brid density functionals to generate highly ac-
formation of oxygen vacancies; rather, ZrCa an-
curate results for the electronic properties and
tisites will form. In SrZrO3 , Sr-rich conditions
defect formation energies, to examine incorpo-
are necessary to preferentially create oxygen va-
ration of acceptors on wrong sites, and to do
cancies.
so for all three compounds. Our comprehensive
A third goal is to investigate other impurities
results allow us to assess how likely acceptor
that could be used as acceptor dopants while
dopants are to self-compensate and to provide
avoiding the self-compensation problem.
engineering solutions to avoid the formation of
On
the oxygen site, N and C are candidate accep-
unwanted defects.
tors; we will examine their eectiveness for gen-
dopants are superior to Sc and Y as promo-
erating oxygen vacancies. It is also important
tors of oxygen vacancies and have smaller pro-
to consider N and C because these elements are
ton binding energies, thus leading to higher pro-
commonly present during synthesis and device
ton conductivity. We also provide guidance for
operation; in particular, we identify a dicarbon
synthesis conditions that will optimize acceptor
complex that could lead to unintentional car-
incorporation.
bon incorporation in the crystal lattice. Impu-
Methodology
rities can also be incorporated on the A site, where monovalent elements such as the alkali metals should act as acceptors when substituting for the divalent Ca, Sr, or Ba.
We nd that alkali metal
Computational details
We nd
alkali metals to be superior to the trivalent ac-
We use DFT within the generalized Kohn-Sham
ceptors Y and Sc. We explicitly verify that in-
scheme,
corporation on the A site (as opposed to the Zr
initio
site) is preferred, and we also examine whether
22
as implemented in the Vienna
Simulation Package (VASP).
23
Ab
We use
the hybrid exchange-correlation functional of
compensation could occur due to incorporation
Heyd, Scuseria, and Ernzerhof (HSE),
of alkali metals as interstitials, in which case
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with
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
EF
25% mixing of short-range Hartree-Fock ex-
reservoir;
change.
erence to the valence-band maximum (VBM);
We apply projector augmented wave
(PAW) potentials
25,26
∆corr
is the Fermi level, which we ref-
28,29
with a plane-wave cuto 2 6 2 2 6 2 of 400 eV. The Ba 5s 5p 6s , Sr 4s 4p 5s , 2 6 2 2 2 6 Ca 3s 3p 4s , Zr 4d 5s , and O 2p electrons
and
are treated explicitly as valence.
ing synthesis. We express them in terms of the
is a nite-size correction term.
The chemical potentials
µi
are variables that
reect the abundance of various elements dur-
For the or-
thorhombic unit cells of CaZrO3 and SrZrO3 ,
deviations
which contain four formula units, a 4×4×3
∆µi
from the values for the elemen-
k-
tal references, i.e., the ground-state structures
point grid is used to integrate over the Brillouin
of the Ae metal, Zr metal, and an O atom in
zone; for BaZrO3 , which has a cubic unit cell
O2 . Assuming conditions close to equilibrium,
that contains one formula unit, we use a 6×6×6
the
k -point
grid.
∆µi
are related by
∆µAe + ∆µZr + 3∆µO = ∆H f (AeZrO3 ),
(3)
Defect calculations
where
To calculate defect properties, we construct su-
tion for AeZrO3 . Our calculated enthalpies of
2a × 2b × 2c,
listed in Table 1.
containing 8 unit
cells and 160 atoms in total; for cubic BaZrO3 , the supercells have dimensions
Table 1: Calculated and Reported Enthalpies of
3a × 3b × 3c,
containing 27 unit cells and 135 atoms.
Formation (in eV per Formula Unit) for Com-
For
pounds Pertinent to this Study.
the supercell calculations in each material, a 2×2×2
k -point
grid is used.
is the enthalpy of forma-
formation for the three AeZrO3 compounds are
percells: for CaZrO3 and SrZrO3 , the supercells have dimensions
∆H f (AeZrO3 )
We examine the
Compound
formation of alkaline-earth (VAe , Ae = {Ca, Sr,
∆H f
(eV) (calc)
∆H f
(eV) (exp)
Ba}), Zr (VZr ), and O vacancies (VO ), as well
CaZrO3
17.41
18.42
as cation antisite defects (AeZr and ZrAe ) and
SrZrO3
17.38
18.28
BaZrO3
17.29
18.28
CaO
6.14
6.58
a host atom, e.g., Na on a Ca site in CaZrO3
SrO
5.61
6.14
(NaCa ), Y on a Zr site (YZr ), or N on an O
BaO
5.09
5.68
CaCO3
11.92
12.52
N in interstitial positions (Nai , Ci , and Ni ). To
SrCO3
11.98
12.65
study the properties of protons, we also con-
BaCO3
11.91
12.58
sider interstitial hydrogen (Hi ). f q The formation energy E (D ) of a point de-
Ca(OH)2
9.84
10.21
Sr(OH)2
9.57
9.94
Ba(OH)2
9.30
9.79
ZrO2
10.99
11.41
Sc2 O3
18.98
19.79
Y 2 O3
19.05
19.75
Na2 O
3.76
4.29
K2 O
3.00
3.75
Rb2 O
2.62
3.51
Zr3 N4
11.19
10.16
self-interstitials (Aei , Zri , and Oi ).
To study
the eect of doping, we consider substitutional impurities, where an extrinsic element replaces
site (NO ). Additionally, we calculate the formation energy of alkali metals (e.g., Na), C, and
fect
D
in charge state
q
is calculated as
27
E f (Dq ) = E(Dq ) − Ebulk + X ni µi + qEF + ∆corr . q
E(D )
(2)
is the total energy of a supercell con-
q ; Ebulk is the total energy of a defect-free supercell; |ni | is the number of atoms of species i added (ni < 0) or removed (ni > 0) from the system; µi is the chemical potential of species i in an external taining defect
D
in charge state
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While the
∆µi
are variable, they are subject
are imposed by an oxide phase Xa Ob :
to constraints imposed by formation of other
a∆µX + b∆µO ≤ ∆H f (Xa Ob ) .
compounds, namely,
∆µAe + ∆µO ≤ ∆H f (AeO)
∆µAe
The lack of dependence on
(4)
and
(6)
∆µZr
implies that our impurity chemical potentials
and
are the same under Ae-rich and Zr-rich condi-
f
∆µZr + 2∆µO ≤ ∆H (ZrO2 ) .
(5)
tions. The limiting phases were selected based on their likelihood of limiting the impurity solu-
The relevant enthalpies of formation are also f listed in Table 1. While these ∆H values are
bility under our chosen chemical potential conditions.
in reasonable agreement with experiment, some systematic deviations are evident. possible to include correction terms;
34
Project database as a reference.
however,
alently,
Changing
stitutional conguration CZr has no net chem-
bility region for AeZrO3 . We show this stability
ical potential dependence.
region graphically for each compound in Fig. 1.
the limiting phase;
For the purposes of presenting our results, we
mined by
will consider two particular chemical potential
∆µZr
For N, Zr3 N4 is
therefore,
∆µN
is deter-
and could, in principle, vary
between Ae-rich and Zr-rich extremes.
conditions; other conditions can always be ex-
ever, the magnitude of
amined by referring back to eq 2. For oxygen,
both cases that
eV, which cor-
of N2 (∆µN
responds to typical experimental conditions for ◦ 12,35 SrZrO3 sintered in air at 1650 C. These rel-
∆µN
∆µZr
How-
is large enough in
is bounded by formation
= 0) rather than Zr3 N4 .
For H, the
limiting phases are the alkaline-earth hydroxides, Ca(OH)2 , Sr(OH)2 , and Ba(OH)2 ; these
formation.
compounds provide a stronger limit on H in-
∆µO is chosen, eq 3 xes the sum of ∆µAe ∆µZr . To choose the Ae and Zr values,
Once
corporation than does water.
The calculated
enthalpies of formation for the limiting phases
we consider two extremes: Ae-rich and Zr-rich.
are also listed in Table 1.
Ae-rich conditions are determined by consider-
Results and Discussion
ing the bound expressed by eq 4, while Zr-rich conditions are determined by eq 5. These limits are labeled in Fig. 1. For the impurity species under consideration, we again dene the chemical potentials
∆µZr .
by the same amount, meaning that the sub-
elemental references, eqs 4 and 5 dene a sta-
VO
∆µAe , or equiv∆µZr changes ∆µC
pendent upon the choice of
per bounds imposed by the formation of the
atively O-poor conditions favor
For C, the
ates; thus, the chemical potential of C is de-
to establish limiting cases. Along with the up-
∆µO =−2.42
3638
limiting phases are the alkaline-earth carbon-
our present work, in which we use them merely
we choose a value
We investigated the pertinent binary
and ternary compounds, using the Materials
It may be
the calculated values suce for the purposes of
and
Page 4 of 18
Bulk Properties
∆µX
with respect to elemental references. An upper
The unit cells of CaZrO3 , SrZrO3 , and BaZrO3
bound is placed on these chemical potentials by
are shown in Figure 2; the depiction of BaZrO3
considering the formation of secondary phases,
in Figure 2(c) is expanded in order to directly
and for the purposes of presenting our results,
compare the structure with those of CaZrO3
we will set
∆µX to its value at that bound.
and SrZrO3 .
This
CaZrO3 and SrZrO3 crystallize
limit represents the most favorable condition
as distorted orthorhombic perovskites in the
for impurity incorporation (i.e., the solubility
space group
limit) and permits us to compare the likelihood
cells. The tilts of the BO6 octahedra are slightly
of various species to incorporate. For the ma-
more pronounced in CaZrO3 than in SrZrO3 ;
jority of impurities considered here, the bounds
these octahedra are also slightly anisotropic,
P bnm
with 20 atoms in their unit
such that we can identify two inequivalent O sites, one approximately in the
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ab-plane,
which
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
(a)
(b)
(c)
Figure 1: Stability regions for (a) CaZrO3 and (b) SrZrO3 , and (c) BaZrO3 , shaded in gray, in the
∆µZr -∆µO phase space. ∆µO = −2.42 eV.
The dashed line represents the choice of
c-axis,
which we label O(2).
BaZrO3 has
purities
higher symmetry and crystallizes as a cubic perovskite in the space group
P m3m;
used throughout this study,
Properties of Point Defects and Im-
we label O(1), and one linking Zr atoms along the
∆µO
The primary goal of materials synthesis is to
its unit cell
can be described by ve atoms. Calculated lat-
create high concentrations of
VO
tice parameters and band gaps are listed in Ta-
able proton uptake via eq 1.
The concentration
ble 2, along with experimental values. and
b
of
a
The
VO
is related to the defect formation energy
connect next-nearest-neighbor Zr atoms, while
the lattice vector in BaZrO3 connects nearest-
c(VO ) = Nsites exp
In order to directly com-
pare unit cell sizes, the lattice constant
√
BaZrO3 must be multiplied by
2,
a
in
where
yielding a
increase in lattice constants with increasing A-
,
(7)
is the Boltzmann constant and
Nsites
Calculated and Experimental Bulk
Native Point Defects
Properties for CaZrO3 , SrZrO3 , and BaZrO3 .
Our calculated formation energies for native
Band Material
Method
CaZrO3
HSE Exp
39,40
HSE Exp
BaZrO3
is decreased; thus, to promote VO formation, E f (VO ) should be as small as possible.
site cation size.
SrZrO3
kB
−E f (VO ) kB T
is the number of available sites in a unit cell. f Concentrations increase exponentially as E
value of 5.93 Å, which matches the monotonic
Table 2:
in order to en-
by a Boltzmann expression:
lattice vectors in CaZrO3 and SrZrO3
neighbor Zr atoms.
6
4143
HSE Exp
44
a
(Å)
b
(Å)
c
(Å)
point defects are shown in Figure 3.
Gap (eV)
5.60
5.80
8.05
5.4
5.59
5.77
8.02
5.7
5.81
5.87
8.24
5.2
5.80
5.82
8.21
5.2, 5.6
4.20
4.20
4.20
4.5
4.20
4.20
4.20
4.0
VO
in-
corporates with the lowest formation energy in +2 the +2 charge state. In order to form VO , a compensating negatively charged defect or impurity is needed to maintain overall charge neutrality in the system. The Fermi level will be pinned near the point where the formationenergy lines for the lowest-energy positively and negatively charged defects intersect. Forming VO+2 in high concentrations thus requires acceptor species with low formation energy. Among native defects, the most likely candidate accep−4 −2 −2 tors are VZr , VAe , and AeZr . However, as seen
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(a)
Ca Sr Ba
Page 6 of 18
(b)
O(1)
O(1)
O(2)
O(2) 𝑐
ZrO6
𝑐
c
a
c b
(c)
𝑎
𝑏
𝑎 b
𝑎
𝑏
𝑎
𝑎
a
Figure 2: Unit cells of (a) CaZrO3 (b) SrZrO3 , and (c) BaZrO3 . For BaZrO3 , multiple cubic unit cells are shown to enable comparison with the lower-symmetry structures of CaZrO3 and SrZrO3 .
in Figure 3, these defects have relatively high
Table 3: Ionic Radii of Native Cations (Ca, Sr,
formation energies near the intersection point
Ba, and Zr) in Å. Values are Listed for 6-Fold
with
VO ,
(Zr-site) and 8-Fold (Ae-site) Ionic Coordina-
meaning that the resulting concentra-
tion Environments. (From Ref. 45).
tions will be low.
Extrinsic acceptor dopants +2 are needed to form VO at lower formation energies and in higher concentrations. +2 Interestingly, we nd that VO is not necessarily the primary native point defect that forms when acceptor doping is performed. In +2 CaZrO3 , the antisite defect ZrCa has a lower +2 formation energy than VO under both Ca-rich and Zr-rich conditions, irrespective of the oxy-
Host
Ionic Radius
Ionic Radius
Cation
6-fold Coordination
8-fold Coordination
Ca
1.00
1.12
Sr
1.18
1.26
Ba
1.35
1.42
Zr
0.72
0.84
gen chemical potential. Thus, the primary effect of doping CaZrO3 with acceptors will be +2 +2 to increase the concentration of ZrCa , not VO .
Y, which are trivalent and therefore act as acceptors when substituting for tetravalent Zr
It can readily be shown that the dierence in formation energy between ZrCa and
VO
on the B site.
does
However, there is a risk that
not depend on oxygen chemical potential; this
these dopants may also incorporate on the A
implies that more oxygen-rich conditions (as
site, where they replace divalent alkaline-earth
could, e.g., result from exposure to water) will
atoms and hence act as donors.
12
The pertinent formation energies are plotted
not aect the ZrCa concentration relative to VO . +2 +2 In SrZrO3 , ZrSr is also more stable than VO ,
in Figure 4. Using the example of Sc, we exam− ine the intersection of the ScZr formation-energy
but only under Zr-rich conditions; incorpora+2 tion of VO therefore requires Sr-rich growth +2 conditions. Only in BaZrO3 is VO the lowest-
line with that of the dominant donors.
energy native donor under all growth condi-
If the +2 formation energy at the intersection with VO is + +2 lower than at the intersection with ScAe or ZrAe ,
tions. These trends closely follow cation ionic
then formation of
radii (see Table 3):
formation of
among the alkaline-earth
VO
VO
will be favored; otherwise,
will be suppressed.
We note
cations, Ca is most similar in size to Zr, which
that our results on self-compensation are inde-
favors formation of antisite defects in CaZrO3 .
pendent of the choice of
∆µO :
it can be shown
that the formation energies at the intersection points are independent of
Group-IIIB Dopants
∆µO
(although the
Fermi-level value at which the crossing occurs The dopants most commonly used in the zir-
will change). Similarly, the formation energy at
conates are group-IIIB metals such as Sc and
ACS Paragon Plus Environment 6
𝑉Ca
6
CaZrO3, Ca-rich
O𝑖
4 2
𝑉Zr
Zr𝑖
Ca𝑖
ZrCa
0
1
2
CaZr 3
4
ZrSr
𝐸𝐹 (eV) 𝑉Ca
6
CaZrO3, Zr-rich
4
Ca𝑖
2
6
𝑉Zr
Zr𝑖
𝑉O 0
(d)
ZrCa 1
2
CaZr 3
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
4
-2
5
3
4
(e)
𝑉Zr
Zr𝑖
2
BaZr 𝑉Ba
SrZr
4
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
5
333
444
55
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
ZrBa
BaZrO3, Zr-rich
O𝑖 Zr𝑖
BaZr 𝑉Zr 𝑉Ba
00
𝑉O
-2 -2
3
222
Ba𝑖
22
ZrSr 1
11 1
66 44
𝑉O
O𝑖
(c)
O𝑖
0
00 0
5
SrZrO3, Zr-rich
𝑉Sr
Sr𝑖
BaZrO3, Ba-rich
𝑉O
-2 -2 -2
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
0
-2
SrZr 2
2
0
𝑉Zr
000
𝑉O
1
(b)
O𝑖
4
Zr𝑖 0
ZrBa
Ba𝑖 222 Zr𝑖
𝑉Zr
Sr𝑖
-2
5
666 444
0
𝑉O
SrZrO3, Sr-rich
O𝑖
2
0 -2
𝑉Sr
6 4
(a)
Formation Energy (eV)
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
Formation Energy (eV)
Page 7 of 18
00
(f)
11
22
33
44
5
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
Figure 3: Formation energies of native defects as a function of Fermi level in CaZrO3 , SrZrO3 , and BaZrO3 (ac) under Ae-rich conditions and (df ) under Zr-rich conditions.
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Page 8 of 18
− − the intersection point where ScZr or YZr com-
concentrations of
pensate with their corresponding A-site donors
factors to consider when identifying optimal
does not depend on
∆µZr or ∆µAe . VO+2 is not the
dopants; below, we will discuss the binding energies between protons and acceptor dopants,
Inspection of
which will provide an explanation for the superior characteristics of Y.
Figures 4(a) and (d) shows, however, that even +2 in the absence of ZrCa , Sc and Y would prefer to +2 self-compensate rather than generate VO . In +2 +2 SrZrO3 , Zr-rich conditions favor ZrSr over VO .
Group-IA Dopants We now examine the eectiveness of A-site
For Sr-rich conditions, Y will preferentially self-
alkali-metal dopants.
compensate, but Sc will be eective at gener+2 ating VO . Our values for VO in Figures 4(b) ous report;
tion from the perspective of material stability and proton mobility;
we attribute this discrepancy to a
dierent value of the
µO
15,16
however, those stud-
ies did not directly address the dierence with
reference. Finally, in
Y- or Sc-doped material, or how the improve-
BaZrO3 , no self-compensation occurs for both
ments are inuenced by growth conditions or by
Y and Sc due to the high formation energies of + + the ScBa and YBa donors.
wrong-site incorporation. Experimental studies
These trends can be explained by atomic size,
13,14
have also investigated alkali metal dop-
ing and shown that it increases the water up-
as shown in Table 4. The ionic radii of Sc and Y
take in BaZrO3 compared to Y doping,
are close to that of Zr, and they therefore read-
14
but
a microscopic explanation for this observation
ily incorporate on the Zr site. For incorporation
has not been provided.
on the A site, Sc and Y are closest in size to Ca,
All these issues are
comprehensively addressed here. We calculated
explaining why both dopants can readily incorporate on the Ca site in CaZrO3 .
Previous computational
studies have examined alkali-metal incorpora-
and (e) dier somewhat from those in a previ-
12
Clearly, there are other
lowest-
As already noted,
energy donor defect in CaZrO3 .
VO+2 .
the formation energies of Na, K, and Rb accep-
In SrZrO3 ,
tors on the A site in each material (Figure 4).
Y is closer in size to the Sr cation, while the
In CaZrO3 , Na incorporates most readily; in
smaller Sc ion is a worse t. Finally, in BaZrO3 ,
SrZrO3 , K is lowest in energy; and in BaZrO3 ,
both Sc and Y have a large size mismatch with
we nd that Rb is most favored.
Ba, and hence they will not incorporate on the
These spe-
cic dopants are indeed similar in size to their
A site.
host A-site cations, although, as can be seen in
Table 4:
Dierences (rDopant
− rHost )
in Ionic
Table 4, ionic size is not a perfect predictor of
Radii between Host Cations and Dopants in Å.
relative formation energies.
For Zr, a 6-Fold Coordination is Assumed; for
For alkali metals, wrong-site incorporation
the Alkaline-Earth Cations (Ca, Sr, Ba), an 8-
(i.e., incorporation on a Zr site) is expected to
Fold Coordination is Assumed. (From Ref. 45).
be less of a problem, because of the greater mismatch in both size and valence.
Host
Indeed, our
calculated formation energies for these congu-
Cation
Sc
Y
Na
K
Rb
Zr
0.03
0.18
0.30
0.66
0.80
Ca
0.25
0.10
0.06
0.39
0.49
Sr
0.39
0.24
0.08
0.25
0.35
stitials have high formation energies, and thus
Ba
0.55
0.40
0.34
0.09
0.19
self-compensation is not a problem.
rations are all very high. We also consider incorporation on interstitial sites, where the alkali metals act as donors.
Our results in Figure 4
show, however, that the Nai , Ki , and Rbi inter-
Figures 4(a) and (d) again show that, CaZrO3 ,
the experimental observation that, in BaZrO3 ,
SrZrO3 under Zr-rich conditions [Figure 4(e)];
Y is a signicantly superior dopant compared
6
VO
is suppressed due to preferential +2 formation of ZrCa . The same problem arises in
These arguments are not sucient to explain
to Sc.
in
however, at approximately 60% Zr-rich/40% Sr-
Our results show that Sc leads to higher
ACS Paragon Plus Environment 8
ZrSr CaZrO3, Ca-rich
4
NaCa
-2
ZrCa
YZr ScZr
ScSr
0 -2
K Sr ScZr
𝑉O
0
1
2
3
4
𝐸𝐹 (eV) CaZrO3, Zr-rich
4
YZr -2 -2
K𝑖 ScZr
YCa YZr
NaCa
-2
0
(d) Figure 4:
1
2
4
5
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
4
5
0
(e)
1
2
1 1
3
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
5
5
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
YBa
-2 -2
4
4 4
ZrBa
00
-4 -4
3 3
ScBa
22
YSr YZr
2 2
RbBa YZr ScZr
BaZrO3, Zr-rich
44
-4
3
0 0
Rb𝑖
ScZr K Sr
ZrSr
𝑉O
(c)
𝑉O
ScSr
0 -2
ZrCa
3
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
2
Na𝑖 ScCa
0
2
SrZrO3, Zr-rich
4
𝑉O
2
1
(b)
YBa
00
-4 -4
0
5
BaZrO3, Ba-rich
Rb ScBa 𝑖
22
YSr
-4
-4
-4
44
K𝑖
2
YCa
Na𝑖 ScCa
0
ZrBa
SrZrO3, Sr-rich
4
𝑉O
2
(a)
Formation Energy (eV)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
ACS Applied Energy Materials
Formation Energy (eV)
Page 9 of 18
YZr ScZr RbBa
𝑉O 0
1
(f)
2
33
44
5
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
Formation energies of oxygen vacancies and dopant species in CaZrO3 , SrZrO3 , and
BaZrO3 (ac) under Ae-rich conditions and (df ) under Zr-rich conditions.
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Page 10 of 18
+2 ZrSr be+2 comes more energetically favorable than VO .
ergies; it occurs in the neutral charge state over
Under Sr-rich conditions, ScZr is the lowest-
tent with C being isoelectronic with Zr. Mirror-
energy acceptor dopant in SrZrO3 [Figure 4(b)].
ing its behavior in ZrO2 ,
We observe, however, that KSr is only slightly
bon undergoes a large lattice relaxation away
higher in energy, and KSr becomes increasingly
from the Zr site, becoming threefold coordi-
favored over ScZr as the material becomes more
nated with a subset of the oxygen nearest neigh+4 bors in a similar fashion to Ci . +4 Both Ci and CZr are relatively stable cong-
rich conditions (independent of
∆µO ),
almost the entire range of Fermi levels, consis-
Zr-rich. At a point dened by 40% Zr-rich/60% Sr-rich, KSr becomes the lowest-energy accep+2 tor. BaZrO3 , nally, will see the highest VO
46,47
we nd that car-
urations, and the energy can further be lowered
concentrations when using RbBa as the accep-
by forming a complex, which we call (2C)Zr ,
tor and growing toward the Zr-rich limit. This
shown in Fig. 6(c); this conguration amounts
increase in
VO
concentration explains the ex-
to two C atoms replacing one Zr atom in the
perimental observation of improved water up-
lattice. Both C atoms adopt the same threefold
take with alkali-metal doping.
Overall, our
coordination with nearby O atoms as CZr , with
ndings suggest that alkali metals are excel-
the C atoms being located in oxygen triangles
lent choices to incorporate
VO
14
in SrZrO3 and
on opposite faces of the octahedron surrounding
BaZrO3 , and synthesis at intermediate condi-
the nominal Zr site. The formation energies of
tions for SrZrO3 and at the Zr-rich limit for
Ci and (2C)Zr can be low enough to potentially
BaZrO3 will maximize the
VO
concentration.
suppress the formation of oxygen vacancies; in addition, these congurations could provide a means for carbon incorporation, thus under-
Carbon and Nitrogen
mining the stability of the material. We remind
Finally, we consider incorporation of C and N.
the reader that our formation-energy plots as-
It was previously found that both species incorporate readily in ZrO2 .
46
sume that carbon is present at the solubility
Formation energies of
limit, i.e., a worst-case scenario in terms of un-
various congurations are plotted in Figure 5.
intentional carbon incorporation. Still, our re-
For NO , Ni , and CZr , these formation energies
sults highlight the importance of limiting expo-
do not vary between Ae-rich and Zr-rich conditions.
sure to carbon.
For NZr , we plot the formation ener-
The same general trends hold for N. NO can
gies at the Ae-rich limit, while for Ci , CO , and
incorporate with lower formation energies than
(2C)Zr , we plot the formation energies at the Zr-
CO but is still unfavorable. The formation en+5 ergy of NZr is also high. Ni is the most favored nitrogen conguration, forming most readily in
rich limit; in both cases the intent is to depict maximum incorporation. For reference, we also included the lowest-energy group-IA and group-
a threefold coordination environment with O +5 atoms. However, the formation energy of Ni is not low enough to play any role in acceptor
IIIB dopants for Ae-rich and Zr-rich conditions. We show the most favorable C congurations in BaZrO3 in Fig. 6; the congurations −2 in CaZrO3 and SrZrO3 are analogous. CO is
compensation, even at the solubility limit.
a candidate O-site acceptor; however, our cal-
Hydrogen
culations show its formation energy to be pro+4 hibitively large. We nd that Ci , shown in Fig. 6(a) adopts a threefold coordination with
In Figure 7 we show the calculated formation energies of hydrogen in both interstitial
neighboring O atoms; this conguration is also +4 46 very similar to that of Ci in ZrO2 . Struc-
and substitutional congurations (on O lattice
turally, this conguration mimics that of the −2 carbonate ion (CO3 ) in terms of CO bond ◦ lengths (∼1.29 Å) and bond angles (∼120 ).
urations at the Zr-rich limit, which represents
CZr , shown in Fig. 6(b), has lower formation en-
mation energies are between 0.1 eV and 0.6 eV
sites). We present energies of hydrogen congthe most energetically favorable limit for hydrogen incorporation. At the Ae-rich limit, for-
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
Formation Energy (eV)
Page 11 of 18
8
NZr
CaZrO3 6 CO
CZr
4
-4
NO
𝑉O
-2
2C
C𝑖 0
1
N𝑖
ScZr
2
3
4
5
6
NO
𝑉O
-2
0
1
N𝑖
ScZr (Sr-rich)
2C
C𝑖
-4
2
K Sr Zr (Zr-rich) 3
4
N𝑖
CZr
2
NO
0
𝑉O
-2
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
(b)
CO
4
2
NZr
BaZrO3
NZr
CZr
0
(Ca-rich) NaCa Zr (Zr-rich)
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
(a)
SrZrO3 6 CO 4
2 0
8
8
-4 5
0
(Zr-rich)
(2C)Zr
C𝑖 1
RbBa
2
ScZr
(Ba-rich) 3
4
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
(c)
Figure 5: Formation energies of various congurations for C and N incorporation in (a) CaZrO3 , (b) SrZrO3 , and (c) BaZrO3 .
NZr is plotted under Ae-rich conditions, while Ci , CO , and (2C)Zr
are plotted at Zr-rich conditions. Values for the lowest-energy acceptors under Ae-rich and Zr-rich conditions and for
Ba
VO
are also included.
(a)
(b)
(c)
ZrO6 C
c
b a +4 Figure 6: Atomic congurations of C in BZO: (a) Ci , (b) CZr , and (c) (2C)Zr . In (b) and (c), the octahedra consisting of the nominal Zr site and its six surrounding O atoms are indicated by the transparent gray regions.
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Table 5:
Binding Energies for Complexes be+ tween Hi and Acceptor Dopants in CaZrO3 , SrZrO3 , and BaZrO3 .
higher, which does not aect our conclusions. Hydrogen interstitials can be present either as − + acceptors (Hi ) or donors (Hi ). Given the applications of the zirconates, the interstitial pro+ ton, Hi , is most pertinent to our study. The + lowest-energy congurations for Hi in CaZrO3 ,
Ebind Acceptor
SrZrO3 , and BaZrO3 are shown in Figure 8.
21
Consistent with previous studies, we nd the + lowest-energy site for Hi to be coordinated closely with an O atom and in close proxim-
O(1); this dierence leads to the distinct con− gurations seen in Figures 8(a) and (b). Hi has fairly high formation energies and is unlikely to
(eV)
CaZrO3
SrZrO3
BaZrO3
− ScZr
0.31
0.39
0.36
−
YZr
ity to another O atom to which it can jump. In + CaZrO3 , the lowest-energy site has Hi bonded + to an O(2), while in SrZrO3 , Hi bonds to an
0.38
0.30
0.26
−
NaAe
0.40
0.32
0.49
− KAe
0.19
0.17
0.25
− RbAe
0.04
0.09
0.20
impediment to proton conductivity.
This ob-
servation helps to explain why Y is a superior
form.
dopant to Sc, as is observed experimentally.
Hydrogen on a substitutional oxygen site has
6
Our calculated binding energies are on the
48
been shown to be stable in oxides. We nd + that HO adopts a multicenter bonding congu-
same order as or even larger than reported proton migration barriers in the zirconates;
ration such that it is roughly equidistant from
18,19
therefore, proton mobility will be signicantly
nearby Zr cations. However, its formation en-
hindered in heavily doped systems.
ergy indicates that it less likely to incorporate
To this
end, doping BaZrO3 with Rb, which has a
than other donor species.
small proton binding energy, should provide improvements compared to doping with Y or
Dopant Interactions with Protons
Sc, which have higher binding energies.
energy among the elements considered here,
with respect to proton mobility in oxides. Pro-
which is consistent with other results on alkali
tons experience Coulombic attraction to nega-
metal doping.
tively charged acceptors; thus, while acceptor
15
For that reason, gains may be
achieved through doping SrZrO3 with either K,
dopants help to incorporate protons, they also
which has the lowest formation energy, or Rb,
hinder the mobility of protons during device operation. We calculate the binding energy + − of a proton Hi to an acceptor A as
In
general, Rb has the smallest proton binding
Trapping is another important consideration
− Ebind (H+ i −A ) = − f E f (H+ i ) + E (A )
Page 12 of 18
which has the lowest binding energy and only a
Ebind
slightly greater formation energy. For CaZrO3 , Rb has the lowest binding energy but also a prohibitively high formation energy; Sc incor-
− − E f (H+ i − A ).
porates more readily and has a low binding en-
(8)
ergy, but its propensity to self-compensate renders it a poor option compared to Na.
We list our calculated binding energies for all
Conclusions
the group-IA and group-IIIB dopants in Table 5. Our results indicate that,
in SrZrO3
and
BaZrO3 , our chosen alkali metal dopants have
Based on our results, we can oer engineering
the lowest proton binding energies.
It is also
recommendations to improve the performance
worth noting that YZr has a lower binding en-
of the alkaline-earth zirconate solid-state pro+2 ton conductors. In CaZrO3 the ZrCa antisite +2 defect is lower in energy than VO , making it
ergy than ScZr in SrZrO3 and BaZrO3 , consistent with other reports.
12,49
The lower binding
energy of Y indicates that it will be less of an
dicult to form useful concentrations of oxy-
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ACS Applied Energy Materials
Formation Energy (eV)
Page 13 of 18
CaZrO3
4
H𝑖
2
HO
0
ScZr
4 4
SrZrO3
4
HO
0
ScZr
(Ca-rich)
NaCa
-2
𝑉O (a)
2
3
4
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
5
RbBa (Zr-rich)
-2 -2 -2
K Sr
𝑉O
(Zr-rich)
1
HO
0 0
0
(b)
𝑉O
ScZr
(Zr-rich)
(Ba-rich) -4
-4
0
H𝑖
(Sr-rich) -2
-4
2 2
H𝑖
2
BaZrO3
1
2
3
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
4
5
00
11
22
33
44
𝐸𝐹 (eV)
(c)
Figure 7: Formation energies of hydrogen congurations at the Zr-rich limit in (a) CaZrO3 , (b) SrZrO3 , and (c) BaZrO3 . Also included are the lowest-energy acceptors under Ae-rich and Zr-rich conditions, along with the oxygen vacancy and cation antisite formation energies.
(a)
Ca Sr Ba
(b)
(c)
c
c
ZrO6 H
b a
a
b
+ Figure 8: Atomic congurations of the lowest-energy positions for Hi in (a) CaZrO3 , (b) SrZrO3 , and (c) BaZrO3 .
ACS Paragon Plus Environment 13
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Page 14 of 18
gen vacancies through doping. Acceptor dop+2 ing does increase VO concentrations in SrZrO3
mendations expressed in this material are those
and BaZrO3 , and we have focused on identi-
the views of the NSF. L.W. and C.G.V.d.W.
fying optimal dopants and growth conditions.
were supported by the Oce of Science of
Our results show that alkali metal doping is
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) (Grant
highly promising.
of the author(s) and do not necessarily reect
Alkali metal doping leads VO+2 , and it avoids
No. DE-FG02-07ER46434). Computational re-
to high concentrations of
sources were provided by the Center for Scien-
the self-compensation eects associated with Y
tic Computing at the California NanoSystems
doping in SrZrO3 . Alkali metal dopants also ex-
Institute and Materials Research Laboratory
hibit the smallest binding energies for protons
(an NSF MRSEC, Grant No.
DMR-1720256)
in SrZrO3 and BaZrO3 , thus reducing the im-
(NSF CNS-0960316), and by the National En-
pact of proton trapping. We have identied the
ergy Research Scientic Computing Center, a
lower proton binding energy of Y as a reason
DOE Oce of Science User Facility supported
for its demonstrated superiority over Sc; thus,
by the Oce of Science of the U.S. DOE under
it is signicant that the alkali-metal binding en-
Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
ergies are even lower. The incorporation of al-
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Graphical TOC Entry Formation Energy (eV)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60
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