Publications by authors named "Stephen Dacek"

Cation disorder is an important design criterion for technologically relevant transition-metal (TM) oxides, such as radiation-tolerant ceramics and Li-ion battery electrodes. In this Letter, we use a combination of first-principles calculations, normal mode analysis, and band-structure arguments to pinpoint a specific electronic-structure effect that influences the stability of disordered phases. We find that the electronic configuration of a TM ion determines to what extent the structural energy is affected by site distortions.

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While control over crystal structure is one of the primary objectives in crystal growth, the present lack of predictive understanding of the mechanisms driving structure selection precludes the predictive synthesis of polymorphic materials. We address the formation of off-stoichiometric intermediates as one such handle driving polymorph selection in the diverse class of MnO-framework structures. Specifically, we build on the recent benchmark of the SCAN functional for the ab initio modeling of MnO to examine the effect of alkali-insertion, protonation, and hydration to derive the thermodynamic conditions favoring the formation of the most common MnO phases-β, γ, R, α, δ, and λ-from aqueous solution.

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The space of metastable materials offers promising new design opportunities for next-generation technological materials, such as complex oxides, semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, steels, and beyond. Although metastable phases are ubiquitous in both nature and technology, only a heuristic understanding of their underlying thermodynamics exists. We report a large-scale data-mining study of the Materials Project, a high-throughput database of density functional theory-calculated energetics of Inorganic Crystal Structure Database structures, to explicitly quantify the thermodynamic scale of metastability for 29,902 observed inorganic crystalline phases.

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High voltage and high thermal safety are desirable characteristics of cathode materials, but difficult to achieve simultaneously. This work uses high-throughput density functional theory computations to evaluate the link between voltage and safety (as estimated by thermodynamic O2 release temperatures) for over 1400 cathode materials. Our study indicates that a strong inverse relationship exists between voltage and safety: just over half the variance in O2 release temperature can be explained by voltage alone.

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