Abstract:
The oxide garnet Li7La3Zr2O12 (LLZO) exhibits high Li-ion conductivity and chemical stability
when in contact with lithium metal anodes, making it a promising solid electrolyte for Li-based
batteries. The tetragonal phase, however, is poorly Li-ion conductive at room temperature. It
is essential for Tetragonal Li7La3Zr2O12 (t-LLZO) to be capable of enduring high temperatures
with good phase stability in order to be used in practical devices. In this way, adding
supervalent cations, such as Ta, to the Zr-site of t-LLZO stabilizes the low-temperature
structure of the tetragonal crystals, and more importantly, creates vacancies in the tetragonal
phase, thereby enhancing its ionic conductivity. However, the crystal structure behaviour at
high temperatures remains unclear. Moreover, the fundamental aspect of supervalent
substitution as well as which level of lattice expansion/contraction promotes ionic diffusion of
this supervalent substitution remains poorly understood.
The density functional theory calculations implemented in the Vienna ab initio simulation
package were utilized to offer a better understanding of the stabilization of the tetragonal
Li7La3Zr2O12 phase by determining the structural, mechanical, and electronic properties of the
high-conductive LLZO structure. It was found that the structural properties calculated are in
good agreement which is within a 2% error of the experimentally measured results from other
studies. The t-LLZO structure has a negative energy of formation, which is consistent with
experimental data. The calculated Young’s modulus is in good agreement with the experimental
observations, and it satisfies the necessary stability constraints for the configuration. Owing to its
large band gap for electrochemical stability, the calculated band structure of t-LLZO shows
that the material is a magnetic separator with a wide and indirect band gap along the gsymmetry point, which is in good agreement with the experimental observations from other
studies.
In this study, first-principle calculations combined with cluster expansion simulation were
performed on the t-LLZO to attain a fundamental understanding on the phase stability of Tadoped LLZO and generate new possible phases of Ta-doped LLZO. Furthermore, Monte Carlo
simulation was utilised to gain an insight into the behaviour of the Ta-doped phase as a function
of temperature under canonical ensemble. The cluster expansion generated 28 new multicomponent Ta-doped Li5La3Zr2-xTaxO12 structures, were all of the new structures are
thermodynamically stable with a negative enthalpy of formation. The Monte-Carlo temperature
profiles have a miscible gap with very small energy difference, indicating that there is no phase
separation and the system mixes well at ~900K. Further density functional theory calculations
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were performed on the most stable generated Ta-doped LLZO structures to determine the structural, mechanical, and electronic properties of the structures for their application as active
solid-state electrolytes. It is found that the generated structures exhibit good structural stability
since the calculated lattice parameters of the Ta-doped LLZO structures are found to be smaller
than that of pure t-LLZO. The results show that the distance between Li-Li in doped Ta-LLZO
is smaller than in pure t-LLZO, which indicates that the smaller the difference between the
dopant ionic radius and the critical dopant radius, the higher the conductivity. Therefore, the
structural properties of Tantalum-doped structures are shown to improve due to the smooth
decrease in calculated lattice parameters. Moreover, the Ta-doped structures show good elastic
stability against deformation and exhibit magnetic separator behavior, which encourages their
use as the next-generation solid electrolytes. Therefore, the findings provide a better
understanding of the phase stability of the generated Ta-doped LLZO structures, which set a
strong foundation for further analysis of the temperature effect on the rate of lithium-ion
diffusion and the mobility of the lanthanum, zirconium, tantalum, and oxygen ions in the
system at high temperatures, which is crucial for the development of these promising solidstate electrolytes for all-solid-state Li-ion batteries.