4.5 Article

Electronic and optical properties of vanadium oxides from first principles

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages 310-318

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.commatsci.2018.01.048

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CMMI from National Science Foundation (NSF) [1629239]
  2. NSF Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) grant [1262810]
  3. University of Toledo Office of Undergraduate Research (OUR)

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We have studied the structural, energetic, electronic, and optical properties of six compounds belonging to the system of vanadium oxides (VO2, V2O5, V2O3, V3O5, V4O7, and V6O13), including both high- and low-temperature phases, obtained using first principles calculations based on density functional theory. The optimized structure of each compound is found to display strong octahedral distortion. This has a major impact on the electronic structures, causing strong mixing of t(2g) and e(g) orbitals. The electronic density of states was calculated with hybrid HSE06 functionals and the GGA + U method. The results show that the HSE06 functionals provide band gap values consistent with available experimental data. For the high-temperature phase of V2O5, we predict a band gap of 2.32 eV. Charge transfer is shown to decrease monotonically as a function of V-O ratio for all compounds. Complex dielectric functions, as computed with hybrid functionals and the GGA + U method, are reported. Hybrid functionals overestimate the energies at which absorption peaks occur, indicating strong electron-hole interaction and lattice polarization within the system. The computed optical conductivity, as derived from optical properties found with the GGA + U method, is in good quantitative agreement with available experimental data. The theoretical framework developed is applicable for other vanadium oxide phases and similar transition metal oxides. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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