First-Principles Insights into Dopant-Vacancy Interactions in Acceptor-Doped Perovskites

Abstract

Understanding and controlling dopant-vacancy interactions is central to the design of highperformance oxide-ion conductors. Using density functional theory, we systematically examined oxygen vacancy stability in acceptor-doped perovskite oxides (LaAlO₃, LaGaO₃, and SrTiO₃) with substitution at both A and B sites. Enumeration of all symmetry-inequivalent vacancy configurations reveals that, in the absence of first-nearest-neighbor dopants, vacancy energies scale linearly with a simple Coulombic metric defined by dopant-vacancy distances, consistent with electrostatic attraction. Importantly, configurations in which dopants occupy first-nearest-neighbor sites deviate strongly from this electrostatic trend with notably different behavior for A site and B site dopants. Analysis of local structure and bonding uncovers the origin of those deviations from the electrostatic trends. The proximity of an A site dopants could suppress the characteristic umbrella-like lattice relaxation of the BO 6 octahedra that stabilizes isolated vacancies, reducing any elastic component. Concurrently, harder ions on dopant sites lead to loss of partial covalency in adjacent cation-oxygen bonds destabilizing near-neighbor dopant-vacancy configurations. These coupled electrostatic, elastic, and bonding effects govern site-dependent dopant-vacancy interactions and establish a unified physical framework for minimizing vacancy trapping in perovskite oxides.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Apr 2026
Accepted
07 Jun 2026
First published
08 Jun 2026

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

First-Principles Insights into Dopant-Vacancy Interactions in Acceptor-Doped Perovskites

Y. Kikuchi, T. Fujisaki, T. Ishihara, J. A. Kilner and A. Staykov, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6TA02783K

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