Mechanisms of point defect formation and ionic conduction in divalent cation-doped lanthanum oxybromide: first-principles and experimental study†
Abstract
The ionic conduction mechanism in M2+-doped (M: Mg, Ca, Zn, and Sr) lanthanum oxybromide (LaOBr) was investigated theoretically and experimentally. Formation energy calculations of point defects revealed that Br− ion vacancies and substitutional M2+ ions were the major point defects in M2+-doped LaOBr, while Br− ion vacancies and antisite O2− ions at Br sites were the major defect types in pure LaOBr. In the relaxed point defect models, doped Mg2+ and Zn2+ ions were displaced from the initial positions of the La3+ ions, and this was experimentally supported by crystal structural analysis. These significant atomic shifts were probably due to the strong interactions between Br− and the dopant ions. First-principles calculations and experimental analyses using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy also suggested the existence of strong interactions. The migration energy of Br− ions was calculated to be 0.53 eV, while the migration energy of O2− ions was 0.92 eV, implying that Br− ion migration via a vacancy system was more probable than O2− ion migration. The calculated association energies between MLa and VBr were 0.4–0.6 eV, suggesting that the association needed to be disrupted for Br− ion conduction. The sum of the association and migration energies was comparable to the experimental association energies of M2+-doped LaOBr.