Defect Chemistry and Doping of Lead Phosphate Oxo Apatite Pb10(PO4)6O

27 September 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Lead phosphate oxo apatite Pb10(PO4)6O is claimed to host room-temperature superconductivity when doped with copper. However, unsuccessful attempts to reproduce this claim has raised many questions about the composition, off-stoichiometry, and copper doping itself, among others. These questions are related to the native defect chemistry and thermodynamic phase stability. We perform first-principles defect calculations to provide much needed insights into the defect chemistry and doping of Pb10(PO4)6O. We find that the dominant Pb and O vacancies pin the Fermi energy in the mid-gap region. Our calculations suggest the plausible existence of closely related off-stoichiometric phase(s); we predict one such phase. We predict moderate levels of Cu doping, which still results in insulating behavior that is consistent with single-crystal measurements. We also rule out interstitial Cu doping, but find that unintentional S incorporation is highly possible. Our findings emphasize the need for careful characterization of the parent composition and the identification of synthesis conditions that will maximize (minimize) intentional (unintentional) doping.

Keywords

apatite
superconductivity
defects
doping
first-principles

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