Towards understanding the special stability of ${\text{SrCo}\text{O}_{2.5}}$ and ${\text{HSrCo}\text{O}_{2.5}}$
Sze-Chun Tsang, Jingzhao Zhang, Kinfai Tse, Junyi Zhu

TL;DR
This study uses density-functional theory and electron-counting models to analyze the stability, electronic, and magnetic properties of brownmillerite SrCoO₂.5 and its hydrogenated form, revealing insights into their phases and stability mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical analysis of BM-SCO and H-SCO, explaining their stability, electronic structures, and magnetic properties, which were previously underexplored.
Findings
Stable phases with large bandgaps (>1 eV) identified for both materials.
Limited charge transfer from H to O explains H-SCO stability.
Intrinsic antiferromagnetism in H-SCO suggests ferromagnetism arises from hole doping.
Abstract
Reversible hydrogen incorporation was recently attested [N. Lu, , Nature , 124 (2017)] in , the brownmillerite phase (BM) of strontium cobalt oxide (SCO), opening new avenues in catalysis and energy applications. However, existing theoretical studies of BM-SCO are insufficient, and that of , the newly-reported hydrogenated SCO (H-SCO), is especially scarce. In this work, we demonstrate how the electron-counting model (ECM) can be used in understanding the phases, particularly in explaining the stability of the oxygen-vacancy channels (OVCs), and in examining the Co valance problem. Using density-functional theoretical (DFT) methods, we analyze the crystalline, electronic, and magnetic structures of BM- and H-SCO. Based on our structure search, we discovered stable phases with large bandgaps (> 1…
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