Abstract

TiO2 is an important material with broad applications that can exist in different phases with dramatically different properties. Theoretical prediction of their polymorph energetics is therefore critical for the material design and for identifying thermodynamically accessible structures. Determining TiO2 relative phase stabilities remains challenging for first-principles methods, and density functional theory is the only approach available for studying phase stabilities at finite temperatures with acceptable computational efficiency. Here, we show that density functional theory using the recently developed efficient strongly constrained and appropriately normed (SCAN) [Sun et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 036402 (2015)] exchange-correlation functional for the first time predicts the phase stability in qualitative agreement with the experimental results at realistic conditions. Further analysis shows that the self-interaction error intrinsic in the density functional persists in the stability prediction. By correcting the self-interaction error through an empirical approach, SCAN predicts the relative stability as well as defect properties in excellent agreement with the experimental results.

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