First-principles calculations for point defects in solids

Point defects affect the performance of functional and structural materials in crucial ways. Recent advances in computational techniques have led to first-principles calculations that allow one to model, understand, and predict the effects of defects in solids. This review provides an overview of th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Reviews of modern physics 2014-03, Vol.86 (1), p.253-305
Hauptverfasser: Freysoldt, Christoph, Grabowski, Blazej, Hickel, Tilmann, Neugebauer, Jörg, Kresse, Georg, Janotti, Anderson, Van de Walle, Chris G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Point defects affect the performance of functional and structural materials in crucial ways. Recent advances in computational techniques have led to first-principles calculations that allow one to model, understand, and predict the effects of defects in solids. This review provides an overview of the current state of this important field. Point defects and impurities strongly affect the physical properties of materials and have a decisive impact on their performance in applications. First-principles calculations have emerged as a powerful approach that complements experiments and can serve as a predictive tool in the identification and characterization of defects. The theoretical modeling of point defects in crystalline materials by means of electronic-structure calculations, with an emphasis on approaches based on density functional theory (DFT), is reviewed. A general thermodynamic formalism is laid down to investigate the physical properties of point defects independent of the materials class (semiconductors, insulators, and metals), indicating how the relevant thermodynamic quantities, such as formation energy, entropy, and excess volume, can be obtained from electronic structure calculations. Practical aspects such as the supercell approach and efficient strategies to extrapolate to the isolated-defect or dilute limit are discussed. Recent advances in tractable approximations to the exchange-correlation functional (DFT + U, hybrid functionals) and approaches beyond DFT are highlighted. These advances have largely removed the long-standing uncertainty of defect formation energies in semiconductors and insulators due to the failure of standard DFT to reproduce band gaps. Two case studies illustrate how such calculations provide new insight into the physics and role of point defects in real materials.
ISSN:0034-6861
1539-0756
DOI:10.1103/RevModPhys.86.253