Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2021; Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session P56: Computational Design and Discovery of Novel Materials: New Structures, Alloys and Synthesis Routes
3:00 PM–5:48 PM,
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP DCOMP
Chair: Ruoxi Yang, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Abstract: P56.00006 : Predicting the Synthesis and Synthesizability of Novel Computationally-Designed Materials
4:24 PM–5:00 PM
Live
Presenter:
Wenhao Sun
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Author:
Wenhao Sun
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
discovery pipeline often remains bottlenecked by the difficulty of synthesizing predicted compounds
in the laboratory. Materials predicted to be metastable with respect to the convex hull can
occasionally be experimentally realized, whereas hull-stable materials are sometimes actually very
difficult to produce. To develop a predictive understanding of synthesis and synthesizability, three
important guiding questions are: 1) Which compounds designed in silico can be synthesized? 2) For a
predicted material, which synthesis method—e.g. solid-state, hydrothermal, vapor deposition,
etc.—is best to synthesize it? 3) Within the parameter space of that synthesis method, what synthesis
‘recipe’ can lead to a phase-pure synthesis of the predicted compound? I will illustrate how a careful
consideration of the local thermodynamic conditions where materials nucleate can help us anticipate
which stable or metastable phases may form during synthesis. Guided by these insights, solid-state
chemists can more rationally navigate the thermodynamic and kinetic energy landscape towards the
targeted synthesis of novel computationally-designed materials.
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