Assessing the Design Rules of Electrides

09 April 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

There are three heuristic criteria commonly used to identify electrides: an apparent valence of plus one, empty space in the crystal structure and the presence of a strongly electron-donating cation. We evoke and explore these criteria by mapping probable charges to a database of all known materials and isolating around around 4,000 compounds that are likely to exhibit an oxidation state of +1. Of these, we identify peaks in off-atom electron density by density functional theory and discuss the validity with which the design rules can be applied to these likely electrides. In doing so, we recover 4 experimentally confirmed electrides among 51 candidates identified as potential new electrides that were not considered previously. All results for each candidate are provided but perhaps of especial significance is the material Ba3AlO4 that has similar composition, components and chemistry to the stable and popular electride catalyst Ca12Al14O32. Overall, we find that the valence and void space rules are surprisingly useful but that there is a breadth of chemistry to electrides that can be severely restricted by considering only alkili and alkali earth metal compounds.

Keywords

electride
Density functional theory
catalysis
high-throughput
electronic structure

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Supplementary Information for Assessing the Design Rules of Electrides
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