Large-scale structure prediction of near-stoichiometric magnesium oxide based on a machine-learned interatomic potential: Crystalline phases and oxygen-vacancy ordering

Hossein Tahmasbi, Stefan Goedecker, and S. Alireza Ghasemi
Phys. Rev. Materials 5, 083806 – Published 30 August 2021
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Abstract

Using a fast and accurate neural network potential, we are able to systematically explore the energy landscape of large unit cells of bulk magnesium oxide with the minima hopping method. The potential is trained with a focus on the near-stoichiometric compositions, in particular on suboxides, i.e., MgxO1x with 0.50<x<0.60. Our extensive exploration demonstrates that for bulk stoichiometric compounds, there are several new low-energy rock-salt-like structures in which Mg atoms are octahedrally six-coordinated and form trigonal prismatic motifs with different stacking sequences. Furthermore, we find a dense spectrum of novel nonstoichiometric crystal phases of MgxO1x for each composition of x. These structures are mostly similar to the rock-salt structure with octahedral coordination and five-coordinated Mg atoms. Due to the removal of one oxygen atom, the energy landscape becomes more glasslike with oxygen-vacancy type structures that all lie very close to each other energetically. For the same number of magnesium and oxygen atoms, our oxygen-deficient structures are lower in energy if the vacancies are aligned along lines or planes than rock-salt structures with randomly distributed oxygen vacancies. We also found the putative global minima configurations for each composition of the nonstoichiometric suboxide structures. These structures are predominantly composed of MgO(111) layers of the rock-salt structure which are terminated with Mg atoms at the top and bottom and are stacked in different sequences along the z direction. Like for other materials, these Magnéli-type phases have properties that differ considerably from their stoichiometric counterparts such as high electrical conductivity.

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  • Received 12 April 2021
  • Revised 2 August 2021
  • Accepted 13 August 2021

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.5.083806

©2021 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Authors & Affiliations

Hossein Tahmasbi1, Stefan Goedecker2, and S. Alireza Ghasemi1,*

  • 1Department of Physics, Institute for Advanced Studies in Basic Sciences (IASBS), Zanjan 45137-66731, Iran
  • 2Department of Physics, Universität Basel, 4056 Basel, Switzerland

  • *aghasemi@iasbs.ac.ir

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Issue

Vol. 5, Iss. 8 — August 2021

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