SoftBV - a software tool for screening the materials genome of inorganic fast ion conductors.
bond-valence site energy
diffusion in solids
energy-storage systems
high-throughput materials screening
solid electrolytes
Journal
Acta crystallographica Section B, Structural science, crystal engineering and materials
ISSN: 2052-5206
Titre abrégé: Acta Crystallogr B Struct Sci Cryst Eng Mater
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101609037
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
01 Feb 2019
01 Feb 2019
Historique:
received:
13
07
2018
accepted:
06
11
2018
entrez:
25
8
2020
pubmed:
1
2
2019
medline:
1
2
2019
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
The identification of materials for advanced energy-storage systems is still mostly based on experimental trial and error. Increasingly, computational tools are sought to accelerate materials discovery by computational predictions. Here are introduced a set of computationally inexpensive software tools that exploit the bond-valence-based empirical force field previously developed by the authors to enable high-throughput computational screening of experimental or simulated crystal-structure models of battery materials predicting a variety of properties of technological relevance, including a structure plausibility check, surface energies, an inventory of equilibrium and interstitial sites, the topology of ion-migration paths in between those sites, the respective migration barriers and the site-specific attempt frequencies. All of these can be predicted from CIF files of structure models at a minute fraction of the computational cost of density functional theory (DFT) simulations, and with the added advantage that all the relevant pathway segments are analysed instead of arbitrarily predetermined paths. The capabilities and limitations of the approach are evaluated for a wide range of ion-conducting solids. An integrated simple kinetic Monte Carlo simulation provides rough (but less reliable) predictions of the absolute conductivity at a given temperature. The automated adaptation of the force field to the composition and charge distribution in the simulated material allows for a high transferability of the force field within a wide range of Lewis acid-Lewis base-type ionic inorganic compounds as necessary for high-throughput screening. While the transferability and precision will not reach the same levels as in DFT simulations, the fact that the computational cost is several orders of magnitude lower allows the application of the approach not only to pre-screen databases of simple structure prototypes but also to structure models of complex disordered or amorphous phases, and provides a path to expand the analysis to charge transfer across interfaces that would be difficult to cover by ab initio methods.
Identifiants
pubmed: 32830774
pii: S2052520618015718
doi: 10.1107/S2052520618015718
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
18-33Subventions
Organisme : National Research Foundation, Prime Minister's Office, Singapore
ID : CRP Award NRF-CRP 10-2012-6
Organisme : National University of Singapore
ID : Centre for Energy Research seed grant