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Entropy-Driven Structural Evolution in Ceramic Oxides

Shuo Liu, Chaochao Dun, Lin Xiong, Shaon Das, Sanjit Ghose, Dominik Wierzbicki, Kaiwen Chen, Zhengxi Xuan, Kun Wang, Feipeng Yang, Baishakhi Mazumder, Xinyi Wang, Wei Chen, Zhou Lin, Jeffrey J. Urban, Mark T. Swihart

2025Journal of the American Chemical Society10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High-entropy ceramics, with five or more elements randomly occupying the same cation crystallographic sites, offer vast compositional diversity and unique properties for material design and applications. However, for many dissimilar elements, entropic stabilization cannot overcome the enthalpic barrier to cation substitution. As a result, most high-entropy ceramics incorporate only a few similar elements, limiting the in-depth exploration of the effect of entropy on ceramic properties. Here, we first use density functional theory to model fluorite crystal structures composed of 1–10 elements and then experimentally present practical fluorite oxide nanostructures containing 1, 3, 8, and 15 metals, as well as a record-breaking 25-element high-entropy ceramic incorporating a diverse palette of rare-earth, transition, alkaline, p -block, and noble metals. As entropy increases, structural and configurational disorder in the solid solution rises, altering structural features such as lattice distortion, crystallinity, homogeneity, defect density, and thermal stability. This research provides new insights and understanding of the role of entropy in stabilizing compositionally complex ceramics.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryCeramicEntropy (arrow of time)ThermodynamicsStatistical physicsOrganic chemistryPhysicsHigh Entropy Alloys StudiesIntermetallics and Advanced Alloy PropertiesHigh-Temperature Coating Behaviors
Entropy-Driven Structural Evolution in Ceramic Oxides | Litcius