The role of defect charge, crystal chemistry, and crystal structure on positron lifetimes of vacancies in oxides

Density functional theory based positron lifetime (PL) calculations for cation and oxygen monovacancies in a range of oxides-hematite, magnetite, hercynite, and alumina-have been conducted to compare the impact of defect chemistry and crystal structure on the predicted lifetimes. The role of defect...

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Published inJournal of physics. Condensed matter Vol. 36; no. 44; pp. 445701 - 445707
Main Authors Lopez-Bezanilla, Alejandro, Selim, Farida A, Oskar Liedke, Maciej, Uberuaga, Blas P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England IOP Publishing 06.08.2024
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Summary:Density functional theory based positron lifetime (PL) calculations for cation and oxygen monovacancies in a range of oxides-hematite, magnetite, hercynite, and alumina-have been conducted to compare the impact of defect chemistry and crystal structure on the predicted lifetimes. The role of defect charge state has also been examined. A comparison across the same type of crystalline structure but different composition shows that oxygen vacancies only induce a slight increase in the positron-electron overlap and thus barely modify the PL as compared to the bulk. A much more substantial increase of PL is observed for cation monovacancies, regardless of crystal structure or the elemental nature of the vacancy, which we ascribe to an enhanced localization of charge density around the vacant site. The structural and compositional richness of the oxide leads to longer defect PLs, with defected hercynite exhibiting the longest PLs. The charge state of cation monovacancies modifies only by a small percentage the positron localization, relegating to secondary importance the metal defect's oxidation state in modifying the lifetime of positrons within vacancy traps.
Bibliography:JPCM-123332.R2
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:0953-8984
1361-648X
1361-648X
DOI:10.1088/1361-648X/ad673b