Abstract
Aqueous precipitation of transition metal oxides often proceeds through non-equilibrium phases, whose appearance cannot be anticipated from traditional phase diagrams. Without a precise understanding of which metastable phases form, or their lifetimes, targeted synthesis of specific metal oxides can become a trial-and-error process. Here, we derive a new thermodynamic potential for the free-energy of a metal oxide in water, which reveals a hidden metastable energy landscape above the equilibrium Pourbaix diagram. By combining this ‘Pourbaix potential’ with classical nucleation theory, we interrogate how solution conditions can influence the multistage oxidation pathways of manganese oxides. We calculate that even within the same phase stability region of a Pourbaix diagram, subtle variations in pH and redox potential can redirect a crystallization pathway through different metastable phases. Our theoretical framework offers a predictive platform to navigate through the thermodynamic and kinetic energy landscape towards the rational synthesis of target metal oxide phases.