Density-functional theory (DFT) predictions of materials properties are becoming ever more widespread. With increased use comes the demand for estimates of the accuracy of DFT results. In view of the importance of reliable surface properties, this work calculates surface energies and work functions for a large and diverse test set of crystalline solids. They are compared to experimental values by performing a linear regression, which results in a measure of the predictable and material-specific error of the theoretical result. Two of the most prevalent functionals, the local density approximation (LDA) and the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof parametrization of the generalized gradient approximation (PBE-GGA), are evaluated and compared. Both LDA and GGA-PBE are found to yield accurate work functions with error bars below 0.3 eV, rivaling the experimental precision. LDA also provides satisfactory estimates for the surface energy with error bars smaller than 10%, but GGA-PBE significantly underestimates the surface energy for materials with a large correlation energy.
We investigate the relation between the chain length of ligands used and the size of the nanocrystals formed in the hot injection synthesis. With two different CdSe nanocrystal syntheses, we consistently find that longer chain carboxylic acids result in smaller nanocrystals with improved size dispersions. By combining a more in-depth experimental investigation with kinetic reaction simulations, we come to the conclusion that this size tuning is due to a change in the diffusion coefficient and the solubility of the solute. The relation between size tuning by the ligand chain length and the coordination of the solute by the ligands is further explored by expanding the study to amines and phosphine oxides. In line with the weak coordination of CdSe nanocrystals by amines, no influence of the chain length on the nanocrystals is found, whereas the size tuning brought about by phosphine oxides can be attributed to a solubility change. We conclude that the ligand chain length provides a practical handle to optimize the outcome of a hot injection synthesis in terms of size and size dispersion and can be used to probe the interaction between ligands and the actual solute.
Experimental nonstoichiometries of colloidal nanocrystals such as CdSe and PbS are accounted for by attributing to each constituent atom and capping ligand a formal charge equal to its most common oxidation state to obtain an overall neutral nanocrystal. In spite of its apparent simplicity, little theoretical support of this approach-called here the oxidation-number sum rule-is present in the current literature. Here, we introduce the ligand addition energy, which we define as the energy gained or expended upon the transfer of one ligand from a reference state to a metal-rich solid surface. For the combination of CdSe, ZnSe and InP with either chalcogen, halogen or hydrochalcogen ligands, we compute successive ligand addition energies using ab initio methods and determine the thermodynamically stable surface composition as that composition where ligand addition turns endothermic. We find that the oxidation-number sum rule is valid in many situations, although exceptions occur for each material studied, most notably when exposed to small oxidative ligands. In the case of InP, however, violations are more severe, extending toward the entire chalcogen ligand family. In addition, we find that electronegativity rather than chemical hardness is a reasonable predictor for ligand addition energies, with the most electronegative ligands yielding the most exothermic addition energies. Finally, we argue that the ligand addition energy will be a most useful quantity for future computational studies on the structure, stability and reactivity of nanocrystal surfaces.
We analyze the mechanism
of seeded growth reactions used to synthesize
colloidal core/shell nanocrystals. Looking at the formation of CdSe/CdS
and CdSe/ZnSe using both zinc blende and wurtzite CdSe seeds with
a different surface termination, we show that the formation rate of
the shell material does not depend on the presence of the seed nanocrystals.
This suggests that shells grow by inclusion of CdS or ZnSe initially
formed in the reaction mixture, possibly under the form of reactive
monomers, and not by successive adsorption and reaction of metal and
chalcogen precursors. This insight makes balancing homogeneous nucleation
and heterogeneous growth of the shell material key to suppressing
spurious secondary nucleation. Through a combination of experimental
work and reaction simulations, we argue that this can be effectively
achieved by raising the monomer solubility through the concentration
of carboxylic acid used in the seeded growth reaction.
The microstructure of a material, typically characterized through a set of microscopy images of two-dimensional cross-sections, is a valuable source of information about the material and its properties. Every pixel of the image is a degree of freedom causing the dimensionality of the information space to be extremely high. This makes it difficult to recognize and extract all relevant information from the images. Human experts circumvent this by manually creating a lower-dimensional representation of the microstructure. However, the question of how a microstructure image can be best represented remains open. From the field of deep learning, we present triplet networks as a method to build highly compact representations of the microstructure, condensing the relevant information into a much smaller number of dimensions. We demonstrate that these representations can be created even with a limited amount of example images, and that they are able to distinguish between visually very similar microstructures. We discuss the interpretability and generalization of the representations. Having compact microstructure representations, it becomes easier to establish processing–structure–property links that are key to rational materials design.
Increased computational resources
now make it possible to generate
large data sets solely from first principles. Such “high-throughput”
screening is employed to create a database of embedding enthalpies
for extrinsic point defects and their vacancy complexes in Si and
Ge for 73 impurities from H to Rn. Calculations are performed both
at the PBE and HSE06 levels of theory. The data set is verified by
comparison of the predicted lowest-enthalpy positions with experimental
observations. The effect of temperature on the relative occupation
of defect sites is estimated through configurational entropy. Potential
applications are demonstrated by selecting optimal vacancy traps,
directly relevant to industrial processes such as Czochralski growth
as a means to suppress void formation.
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