Assessing Thermodynamic Selectivity of Solid-State Reactions for the Predictive Synthesis of Inorganic Materials

  • Matthew J. McDermott
  • , Brennan C. McBride
  • , Corlyn E. Regier
  • , Gia Thinh Tran
  • , Yu Chen
  • , Adam A. Corrao
  • , Max C. Gallant
  • , Gabrielle E. Kamm
  • , Christopher J. Bartel
  • , Karena W. Chapman
  • , Peter G. Khalifah
  • , Gerbrand Ceder
  • , James R. Neilson
  • , Kristin A. Persson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Synthesis is a major challenge in the discovery of new inorganic materials. Currently, there is limited theoretical guidance for identifying optimal solid-state synthesis procedures. We introduce two selectivity metrics, primary and secondary competition, to assess the favorability of target/impurity phase formation in solid-state reactions. We used these metrics to analyze 3520 solid-state reactions in the literature, ranking existing approaches to popular target materials. Additionally, we implemented these metrics in a data-driven synthesis planning workflow and demonstrated its application in the synthesis of barium titanate (BaTiO3). Using an 18-element chemical reaction network with first-principles thermodynamic data from the Materials Project, we identified 82985 possible BaTiO3 synthesis reactions and selected 9 for experimental testing. Characterization of reaction pathways via synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction reveals that our selectivity metrics correlate with observed target/impurity formation. We discovered two efficient reactions using unconventional precursors (BaS/BaCl2 and Na2TiO3) that produce BaTiO3 faster and with fewer impurities than conventional methods, highlighting the importance of considering complex chemistries with additional elements during precursor selection. Our framework provides a foundation for predictive inorganic synthesis, facilitating the optimization of existing recipes and the discovery of new materials, including those not easily attainable with conventional precursors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1957-1975
Number of pages19
JournalACS Central Science
Volume9
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 25 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.

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