First-principles calculations show van der Waals forces stabilize the known B2O3-I polymorph as lowest energy while metastable polymorphs match glass energy and density, offering an explanation for the material's strong vitrification tendency.
van der Waals forces stabilize low-energy polymorphism in B2O3: Implications for the crystallization anomaly
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abstract
The cohesive energies and structural properties of recently predicted, and never synthesized, B$_2$O$_3$ polymorphs are investigated from first principles using density functional theory and high-accuracy many-body methods, namely, the random phase approximation and quantum Monte Carlo. We demonstrate that the van der Waals forces play a key role in making the experimentally known polymorph (B$_2$O$_3$-I) the lowest in energy, with many competing metastable structures lying only a few kcal/mol above. Remarkably, all metastable crystals are comparable in energy and density to the glass, while having anisotropic and mechanically soft structures. Furthermore, the best metastable polymorph according to our stability criteria has a structural motif found in both the glass and a recently synthesized borosulfate compound. Our findings provide new perspectives for understanding the B$_2$O$_3$ anomalous behavior, namely, its propensity to vitrify in a glassy structure drastically different from the known crystal.
fields
cond-mat.mtrl-sci 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
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van der Waals forces stabilize low-energy polymorphism in B2O3: Implications for the crystallization anomaly
First-principles calculations show van der Waals forces stabilize the known B2O3-I polymorph as lowest energy while metastable polymorphs match glass energy and density, offering an explanation for the material's strong vitrification tendency.