Exploring the High-Temperature Stabilization of Cubic Zirconia from Anharmonic Lattice Dynamics

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Abstract

Finite-temperature stability of crystals is of continuous relevance in solid-state chemistry with many important properties only emerging in high-temperature polymorphs. Currently, the discovery of new phases is largely serendipitous due to a lack of computational methods to predict crystal stability with temperature. Conventional methods use harmonic phonon theory, but this breaks down when imaginary phonon modes are present. Anharmonic phonon methods are required to describe dynamically stabilized phases. We investigate the high-temperature tetragonal-to-cubic phase transition of ZrO2 based on first-principles anharmonic lattice dynamics and molecular dynamics simulations as an archetypical example of a phase transition involving a soft phonon mode. Anharmonic lattice dynamics calculations and free energy analysis suggest that the stability of cubic zirconia cannot be attributed solely to anharmonic stabilization and is thus absent for the pristine crystal. Instead, an additional entropic stabilization is suggested to arise from spontaneous defect formation, which is also responsible for superionic conductivity at elevated temperatures.

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Tolborg, K., & Walsh, A. (2023). Exploring the High-Temperature Stabilization of Cubic Zirconia from Anharmonic Lattice Dynamics. Crystal Growth and Design, 23(5), 3314–3319. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.2c01458

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