Abstract

Predicting the compositional phase stability of strongly correlated electron materials is an outstanding challenge in condensed matter physics, requiring precise computations of total energies. In this work, we employ the density functional theory plus dynamical mean-field theory (DFT+DMFT) formalism to address local correlations due to transition metal d electrons on compositional phase stability in the prototype rechargeable battery cathode material LixCoO2, and detailed comparisons are made with the simpler DFT+U approach (i.e. the Hartree-Fock solution of the DMFT impurity problem). Local interactions are found to strongly impact the energetics of the band insulator LiCoO2, most significantly via the Eg orbitals, which are partially occupied via hybridization with O p states. We find CoO2 and Li1/2CoO2 to be moderately correlated Fermi liquids with quasiparticle weights of 0.6-0.8 for the T2g states, which are most impacted by the interactions. As compared to DFT+U, DFT+DMFT considerably dampens the increase in total energy as U is increased, which indicates that dynamical correlations are important to describe this class of materials despite the relatively modest quasiparticle weights. Unlike DFT+U, which can incorrectly drive LixCoO2 towards spurious phase separating or charge ordered states, DFT+DMFT correctly captures the system's phase stability and does not exhibit a strong charge ordering tendency. Most importantly, the error within DFT+U varies strongly as the composition changes, challenging the common practice of artificially tuning U within DFT+U to compensate the errors of Hartree-Fock. DFT+DMFT predicts the average intercalation voltage decreases relative to DFT, opposite to the result of DFT+U, which would yield favorable agreement with experiment in conjunction with the overprediction of the voltage by the strongly constrained and appropriately normed DFT functional.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call