Zirconia and its allotropes; A Quantum Monte Carlo study.

ORAL

Abstract

With a high strength and stability at elevated temperatures, Zirconia (zirconium dioxide) is one of the best corrosion-resistant and refractive materials used in metallurgy, and is used in structural ceramics, catalytic converters, oxygen sensors, nuclear industry, and in chemically passivating surfaces. The wide range of applications of ZrO2 has motivated a large number of electronic structures studies of its known allotropes (monoclinic, tetragonal and cubic). Density Functional Theory has been successful at reproducing some of the fundamental properties of some of the allotropes, but these results remain dependent on the specific combination of exchange-correlation functional and type of pseudopotentials, making any type of structural prediction or defect analysis uncertain. Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) is a many-body quantum theory solving explicitly the electronic correlations, allowing reproducing and predicting materials’ properties with a limited number of controlled approximations. In this study, we use QMC to revisit the energetic stability of Zirconia's allotropes and compare our results with those obtained from density functional theory.

Authors

  • Andrea Jokisaari

    Northwestern University

  • Anouar Benali

    Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne Natl Lab

  • Hyeondeok Shin

    Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne Natl Lab

  • Ye Luo

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Alejandro Lopez Bezanilla

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Laura Ratcliff

    Argonne National Laboratory

  • Peter Littlewood

    The University of Chicago, Argonne National Laboratory, Univ of Chicago

  • Olle Heinonen

    Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne Natl Lab