Next Article in Journal
Cu2S Nanocrystals and Their Superlattices
Previous Article in Journal
Gemological Characteristics and Trace Chemical Element Analysis of Emerald in Kafubu, Zambia
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

A Set of Interaction Potentials for Molecular Dynamics Simulations of YPO4 Crystal

by
Kirill A. Nekrasov
*,
Yulia A. Kuznetsova
*,
Dmitry V. Raikov
and
Vyacheslav V. Pchelnikov
Institute of Physics and Technology, Ural Federal University, 19 Mira St., 620002 Yekaterinburg, Russia
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Crystals 2025, 15(5), 386; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15050386
Submission received: 30 March 2025 / Revised: 20 April 2025 / Accepted: 21 April 2025 / Published: 23 April 2025

Abstract

:
A set of empirical pair interaction potentials for molecular dynamics (MD) modeling of the YPO4 crystal is proposed. The parameters of the potentials, as well as the effective charges of the ions, are recovered based on experimental data on the lattice constants of YPO4, as well as on the structure of the PO4 complex within this crystal. Using these potentials, an MD simulation of YPO4 crystallites isolated in vacuum is performed in the temperature range from 300 K to 2200 K. A quantitative agreement between the thermal expansion coefficient of the crystal and experimental data is obtained. Simulation of the formation of Frenkel defects in the yttrium, oxygen, and phosphorus sublattices is carried out. The formation energy of the Frenkel defects in the oxygen and yttrium sublattices is in quantitative agreement with ab initio calculations.

1. Introduction

Yttrium orthophosphate, YPO4, come into use as a luminophore due to its resistance to high temperatures, chemical stability, and high transparency in the visible and ultraviolet ranges. The YPO4 crystal serves as a matrix for rare-earth metal ions (such as Eu3+, Tb3+, Dy3+, Ce3+) [1,2,3]. Impurity activators impart luminescent properties to the system by creating energy levels in the band gap of the matrix. Along with impurities, yttrium and oxygen vacancies have a significant effect on the light-emitting properties of YPO4. Such vacancies affect the distribution of electron density, creating new energy levels in the band gap [4]. It is known, in particular, that oxygen vacancies can enhance or suppress luminescence, depending on their concentration [5,6,7]. The intrinsic defects of the host can reduce the symmetry of the local environment of activator ions, leading to an increased probability of radiative optical transitions and an enhancement of the quantum efficiency of luminescence [8]. In addition, intrinsic defects can act as electron and hole trap centers and play a crucial role in the mechanisms of persistent luminescence [9]. For instance, in YPO4, oxygen vacancies serve as electron traps, while yttrium vacancies act as hole traps [4]. The thermal release of charge carriers from traps at room temperature underlies the phenomenon of persistent luminescence. In this context, the concentration of defects plays a decisive role in the resulting characteristics [10]. Insufficient or excessively high defect concentrations can lead to inefficient energy storage or significant energy losses, respectively, resulting in a decrease in both the intensity and duration of luminescence.
The energies of the formation of intrinsic point defects in YPO4 were calculated from the first-principles by F. Gao et al. [11]. However, the capabilities of ab initio calculations are limited by the sizes of model systems (no more than several hundred particles). Meanwhile, there is an interest in the prediction defect structure of YPO4 depending on the crystal growth methods, impurity composition, temperature, and substrate structure. It is relevant to study the composition and stability of clusters formed by defects in YPO4 crystal. The mechanisms of formation, interaction, and transfer of defects can be clarified by classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulation, which requires suitable interaction potentials of crystal particles. Interaction potentials for classical modeling of YPO4 were proposed in references [12,13,14]. The energies of defect formation calculated using these potentials differ significantly from quantum chemical calculations [11]. It is useful to propose an alternative set of potentials, which is the subject of this work.

2. Obtaining the Interaction Potentials

The YPO4 crystal can be considered as a system formed by PO43− ions, which are bound by Coulomb and dispersion attraction with Y3+ ions. The structure of the symmetric PO43− ion is shown in Figure 1. The oxygen ions are placed on equal distances (R) from the center of the cube R = 1.54 Å [15], which remain almost unchanged when the PO43− ion is incorporated into YPO4 [16]. The angles α and β in an isolated PO43− ion would be identical. In the YPO4 crystal, these angles become different (α = 113°, β = 103°), since the cube shown in Figure 1 is compressed along the vertical axis.
The unit cell of the YPO4 crystal is shown in Figure 2. For clarity, the sizes of the ions in Figure 2 are proportional to the atomic radii instead of the ionic radii. In this representation, the largest size is that of the yttrium particles, while the smallest size is that of the oxygen particles. The cell is a rectangular parallelepiped with sides a = b = 6.8947 Å, c = 6.0276 Å [17] (here and below, these values correspond to room temperature). The nearest environment of the yttrium ion is formed by four oxygen ions at a distance of RY-O = 2.3087 Å [17], and the other four oxygen ions are located at a close distance of 2.3813 Å [17].
The yttrium–oxygen distances in YPO4 coincide with the distances between cations and anions in the ionic crystals of simpler structures. For example, in the Y2O3 crystal, the radius of the first coordination sphere of yttrium is 2.333 Å [19]. Thus, in the present work it was assumed that the yttrium–oxygen interaction could be described by a pair potential, depending only on the distance between the centers of the particles R, in the following form:
U Y O R = K E q Y q O R + A Y O · e R · B Y O ,
This takes into account the Coulomb attraction created by the effective charges qy, qo, (KE = 14.39976 eV·Å/ē2 is the Coulomb constant; ē is the elementary charge), as well as the valence repulsion of overlapping electron shells (the parameters AY–O, BY–O). Such potentials are successfully used to model ionic crystals [20]. The dispersion attraction was not included in the UY–O(R) potential, since its parameters are difficult to reconstruct from experimental data against the background of a stronger oxygen–oxygen dispersion attraction. The dispersion attraction of oxygen anions in YPO4 turns out to be stronger than that of yttrium and phosphorus ions, since the polarizability of oxygen ions is significantly higher. In pairs of ions of the opposite sign Y–O and P–O, the dispersive forces are small compared to the Coulomb attraction. The approach in which non-zero dispersive attraction acted only between oxygen ions was successfully applied to restore pair potentials for modeling UO2 in earlier work [21].
The PO43− complex retains its structure not only in YPO4, but also when incorporated into other crystals [22]. In particular, the phosphorus–oxygen distance within this complex remains approximately equal to 1.5 Å. In this work, it was assumed that the stability of the PO43− complex corresponds to the existence of a chemical bond P–O. At the same time, the presence of non-zero effective charges on both oxygen (qo) and phosphorus (qp) ions was assumed. Thus, the phosphorus–oxygen interaction was described by the following potential:
U P O R = K E q P q O R + ε P O · ( e 2 β R R m 2 · e β R R m ) ,
which emulates chemical bonding using the Morse function “two exponents” [23]. Dispersive attraction was again not included, assuming it to be small compared to oxygen–oxygen attraction.
The interaction of a pair of oxygen ions was described by a potential that included Coulomb repulsion, valence repulsion of overlapping electron shells, and dispersion attraction.
U O O R = K E q O q O R + A Y O · e R · B O O χ O O ( R d a ) · C O O R 6 ,
The dispersion attraction was treated by taking into account its dumping at small distances corresponding to the overlap of the electron shells of the particles. The dumping function χO–O(da·R) proposed in [24,25] was used. The parameter da was chosen equal to 4.63 Å−1, as suggested in [25]. For MD simulation, the function χO–O(da·R)/R6 at 1.8 Å < R < 3.7 Å was approximated in the following form:
χ O O ( R ) R 6 = 1.4466 · ( 0.3148 · e 2.3623 · R + 0.1415 · e 1.8118 · R 0.2006 · e 4.9845 · R ) .
The parameters of the interaction potentials Equations (1)–(3) were determined by achieving static equilibrium of the YPO4 crystal lattice, which in dynamic modeling would correspond to zero absolute temperature. The values of the parameters were chosen to minimize the potential energy E of an ideal crystal, which was the sum of the potential energies of interaction of all pairs of particles.
E = 1 2 · i = 1 N j = 1 ,   j i N U i j R i j .
where N is the number of particles in the model crystallite; and i, j are the particle indices, Uij(Rij) are the interaction potentials defined by Equations (1)–(3).
All positions of yttrium cations, as well as oxygen anions, in an ideal YPO4 crystal are equivalent to each other. Accordingly, in order to minimize the energy E, it was sufficient to require zero values of the derivatives of this energy with respect to the coordinates of one arbitrary yttrium ion, as well as with respect to the coordinates of an arbitrary oxygen ion. Thus, the following derivatives should equal zero at static equilibrium when the crystal lattice parameters match the experimental values.
E x Y = 0 , E z Y = 0 , E x O = 0 , E z O = 0 .
where E is energy from Equation (5), and xy, zy, xo, zo are the Cartesian coordinates of arbitrary yttrium and oxygen ions in the ideal YPO4 lattice. The x axis is oriented along the longer edge of the unit cell (a = 6.8947 Å), while the z axis is oriented along the shorter edge c = 6.0276 Å.
The parameters of the interatomic potentials Equations (1)–(3), including effective charges qp, qy, and qo, were determined through a combined approach involving minimization of the sum of squared residuals derived from the equilibrium conditions in Equation (6), and systematic identification of crystal lattice configurations exhibiting thermodynamic stability during molecular dynamics simulations. The effective charges of yttrium and phosphorus ions qp and qy were varied independently of each other, while the oxygen charge qo was calculated using the following formula:
q o = q p + q y / 8
which ensured the electroneutrality of the crystal.
The parameters of potentials Equations (1)–(3) are listed in Table 1. The effective charges of intrinsic ions were obtained as follows, qp = +1.323·ē, qy = +1.8·ē, qo = −0.78075·ē, where ē is the elementary charge.

3. Molecular Dynamics Simulation

The reconstructed interaction potentials were verified by molecular dynamics simulation of finite size YPO4 crystallites that were isolated in vacuum. The boundaries of these crystallites were formed by crystallographic planes (100), (010), (001). The crystallite sizes varied from 8232 (343 unit cells) to 52,728 particles (2197 unit cells), and the temperatures were in a range from 300 K to 2200 K. The lower limit of the size range was determined by the need to exclude significant surface effects in the nanocrystal volume, while the upper bound was limited by the available computational performance. The temperature range boundaries were set between room temperature and the experimental melting point of YPO4.
The equations of particle motion were integrated by the “leapfrog” method with a step of Δt = 3·10−15 s. The Berendsen thermostat [26] with the parameter τ = 9 ps was used to stabilize the temperature. As is known, the Berendsen thermostat is not ergodic. Nevertheless, the parameter value τ = 9 ps is sufficiently large for this thermostat to be comparable to the Nosé–Hoover [27,28] thermostat in terms of the quality of particle energy distribution [29]. The calculations were performed using the original (home-made) software (Ver. 1) [30] with parallelization of calculations on CUDA architecture graphics processors.
At the beginning of each computational experiment, the crystal particles were placed at the sites of an ideal lattice, with a Maxwellian velocity distribution. Subsequently, the surface and volume of the crystallite were allowed to relax freely. The initial and equilibrium states of the model systems are illustrated in Figure 3. It can be seen that the surface disordering was limited to the smoothing of the vertices and edges of the parallelepiped, while the bulk retained the structure of an ideal YPO4 crystal.
In addition to the visual analysis, the correctness of the YPO4 crystal simulation was checked by calculating the radial distribution functions of phosphorus–phosphorus, phosphorus–yttrium, phosphorus–oxygen, and by measuring the distances between the ionic planes (100), (010), and (001) in the bulk of the model crystallites. Figure 4 shows the characteristic time dependence of the specific volume v per YPO4 molecule in the central region of the model nanocrystals of 52,728 particles during a computational experiment. It is evident that the equilibrium state was established within times of about 10 ns and did not change thereafter.
To investigate the possible influence of model crystallite size on the crystal lattice structure, this study obtained the dependencies of the lattice parameters a and c on size at temperatures ranging from 300 K to 1900 K. The linear crystallite size L varied from 7 to 13 unit cells, while the number of particles in the system changed from 8232 to 52,728. As an example, Figure 5 shows the a(L) and c(L) dependencies obtained at T = 1000 K. For comparison, experimental values of a and c for a macroscopic crystal at the same temperature are also plotted, calculated using the linear expansion coefficient from the work of Wang et al., 2010 [31]. The results show that the calculated lattice constants exhibit practically no dependence on L, and the difference between the calculated and experimental values of these constants remains unchanged as L varies. The same result was obtained at other temperatures. The simulation data discussed below correspond to the largest size L = 13 unit cells (52,728 particles). By selecting this size, we aimed to minimize the influence of surface effects on the bulk properties of the model.
As can be seen from Figure 5, the lattice parameter a in the present work is underestimated compared to the experimental data, while the parameter c is overestimated, to a lesser extent. At T = 1000 K, the calculated lattice parameters were a(1000 K) = 6.80 Å, c(1000 K) = 6.08 Å, while the experimental values, taking into account the linear expansion coefficient Wang-2010 [31], are aexp(1000 K) = 6.911 Å, cexp(1000 K) = 6.042 Å. Similarly, at room temperature, our parameters were a(300 K) = 6.765 Å, and c(1000 K) = 6.046 Å, in comparison with aexp(300 K) = 6.8947 Å, cexp(1000 K) = 6.0276 Å [17] (Δa = −1.9%, Δc = +0.3%).
The difference between both parameters and experimental data is a result of the displacement of yttrium ions relative to phosphorus ions, which we consider as the centers of PO4 structural units. The pair of Y ions closest to the phosphorus ion has Cartesian coordinates (0, 0, 0.5 c) relative to it, where c is the lattice constant, and the axis z coincides with the vertical axis in Figure 2. In our model, the P–Y distance for these two ions is increased by 0.009 Å (0.3%) compared to experimental data, which explains the overestimation of the constant c.
The second coordination sphere of P–Y is formed by four yttrium ions lying in the same horizontal plane as the phosphorus ion in Figure 2, at an experimental distance of 3.762 Å. In our model, this distance is reduced to 3.70 Å (by 1.6%), leading to the error in the lattice constant a. Unfortunately, attempts to improve interaction potentials for simultaneous refinement of the constants a and c resulted in instability of the structure of the model nanocrystals during MD simulations.
The shape of the PO4 complex in our model is somewhat distorted compared to the experiment: this complex is compressed by 0.07 Å (3.6%) along the vertical axis in Figure 2 and by 0.04 Å (1.6%) along the perpendicular horizontal axes. Our analysis did not reveal any direct relationship between the errors in the positions of yttrium and oxygen ions.
The examination of a range of temperatures from 300 K to 2200 K made it possible to observe the thermal expansion of the crystal lattice. Figure 6 shows the temperature dependence of the specific volume v per YPO4 molecule in the central region of model nanocrystals consisting of 52,728 particles. For comparison, an experimental dependence obtained using the linear expansion coefficient from [31] is shown. At room temperature, the calculated value of v is underestimated by 3.5% relative to the experiment. The divergence decreases with increasing temperature.
Figure 7 illustrates the accuracy of the modeling of the YPO4 unit cell shape. The temperature dependencies of the crystal lattice parameters a and c are shown in comparison with the experimental data from Wang et al., 2010 [31]. As discussed above, the constant a is underestimated compared to the experiment, while the constant c is overestimated, being significantly more accurate than the constant a. With increasing temperature, the error in the constant a decreases slightly, while the error in the constant c increases due to the overestimation of the coefficient of linear expansion.
The coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) calculated in the present work is compared with the experimental data in Figure 8. The experimental data used for comparison were taken from [16,31]. In the relatively recent work by Wang et al., 2010 [31], the CTE is provided as a function of temperature. In the older work [16], the CTE values are given as constants, but these constants differ along the edges of the unit cell a and c: CTEa = 5.81·10−6 1/K, CTEc = 7.16·10−6 1/K [16]. In Figure 8, the values from these references are shown as horizontal dashed lines.
In the present study, no significant anisotropy of the CTE for model crystallites was detected. Therefore, the temperature dependence of the model CTE (Figure 8) was averaged over the a, b, and c directions. At room temperature, the thermal expansion coefficient obtained in this work is close to the experimental data. However, with increasing temperature, the CTE rises significantly faster than in the experiment.
The overestimation of the calculated coefficient of linear expansion at high temperatures may be due to the fact that only low-temperature data were used to reconstruct the interaction potentials. However, with increasing temperature, the amplitude of particle oscillations increases, which requires accurate reproduction of the shape of the short-range potentials in an increased range of distances.
The model crystal lattice of YPO4 remained stable up to 2000 K. At 2200 K, the specific volume increased abruptly and the structure of the system became disordered. Further studies are needed to determine whether this process could be the melting point of the crystal. However, we note that the experimental melting temperature of YPO4 is 2268 ± 20 K [32], which is close to the stability limit of the model in this work.
In order to provide a detailed comparison between the structure of model crystals and experimental data, radial distribution functions for oxygen, yttrium, and phosphorus ions relative to the phosphorus ion were calculated in this study. The average distances between the nearest neighbors, determined based on these functions, correspond to the crystal lattice structure of YPO4 (Table 2). At the same time, the P–Y and P–P distances are underestimated relative to the experimental values to the same extent as the lattice constants.
On the other hand, the P–O distances in the present work were practically independent of temperature. This is due to the use of the Morse potential with a narrow and deep minimum ε = 3.5 eV (calculated in this work) at a distance RP–O = Rm = 1.51 Å. The physical meaning of this model is that the PO4 complexes act as distinct structural units of the crystal.
The accuracy of lattice constant calculations achieved in this work is comparable to the results obtained previously using classical potentials for modeling YPO4 and structurally similar rare-earth phosphates. In work [11], dedicated to YPO4, the potentials from [12,13,14] yielded lattice constants a = 6.760 Å and c = 6.260 Å. The trend to underestimate the constant a and overestimate the constant c aligns with our findings, though the overestimation of c in [11] was more pronounced.
In the study [33], two sets of interaction potentials were proposed for modeling LaPO4 and one set for YbPO4. The crystal LaPO4 forms a monoclinic structure (space group P21/c) with three different lattice constants: a = 6.831 Å, b = 7.071 Å, and c = 6.503 Å [33]. The “Monazite 1” set allowed the authors of [33] to reproduce these constants with errors of Δa = +0.40%, Δb = +0.01%, and Δc = +2.03%, while the “Monazite 2” set resulted in Δa = −1.28%, Δb = −1.73%, and Δc = +3.31% [33]. Notably, in “Monazite 1,” which showed better agreement, the P–O bonding was described by a Morse potential Equation (2) with a minimum at Rm = 1.57 Å and well depth ε = 3.0 eV that are close to the parameters obtained in our work. In contrast, the set “Monazite 2” used a Buckingham potential with dispersive attraction for P–O bonding, which did not have a deep minimum. Strong P–O binding was achieved by increasing the effective charge of phosphorus from 1.784 ē to 3.2 ē (while the lanthanum charge was reduced from 3.0 ē to 1.6 ē, keeping the oxygen charge fixed at qo = −1.196 ē).
YbPO4 is a direct structural analog of YPO4 with similar lattice constants. In [33], experimental values a = 6.809 Å and c = 5.964 Å were reproduced with errors Δa = −1.599% and Δc = +2.87% [33]. The interaction P–O was modeled using the same Buckingham potential as in the “Monazite 2” set for LaPO4. This case again exhibited the trend of underestimating a and overestimating c.

4. Frenkel Disorder Energies

One of the applications of the interaction potentials proposed in this work might be modeling of the intrinsic disorder in the YPO4 crystal. In this work, the energies of Frenkel pair formation in the yttrium, oxygen, and phosphorus sublattices were calculated using molecular dynamics. Interstitial ions were placed at positions with coordinates (0.25 a, 0.5 b, 0.5 c) relative to the lower left corner of the unit cell shown in Figure 2. In [11], this position is designated as Ta (Figure 2a,b). The vacancy was placed as far from the interstitial position as the model dimensions allowed.
In the presence of a free surface, the error in the calculation of Frenkel defect formation energies was found to be too high. Therefore, as a model system for calculating these energies, quasi-infinite crystallites consisting of 5184 particles (6 unit cells along each edge of the supercell) with periodic boundary conditions were used. Simulations were performed with dynamic variation in the supercell dimensions, ensuring zero mean values of the stress tensor components σxx, σyy, σzz. A barostat proposed by V.A. Ryabov in [34] was used. At a temperature of T = 25 K, the calculated lattice parameters of the ideal YPO4 lattice were a = b = 6.7598 Å, c = 6.0374 Å, in agreement with the result of the simulation of the isolated nanocrystals.
To calculate the above-mentioned disordering energies, MD simulations of the quasi-infinite crystals were performed at a constant temperature of T = 25 K. The low temperature was chosen to avoid recombination of interstitial ions with the vacancy. At this temperature, the displaced ions remained in the interstitial site for at least 1 ns. Interstitial yttrium and phosphorus cations displaced their nearest neighbors of the same kind to an adjacent interstitial position, so that pair defects known as split interstitials were formed (Figure 9). These configurations remained stable during the computational experiments.
The defect formation energies were calculated as the differences in the total energies of the supercell with and without the defect. The dimensions of the supercell were fixed when calculating the energies of defect formation, since the system of defects located periodically could change the shape of the supercell in a non-physical way.
The calculated values of the formation energy of Frenkel defects are listed in Table 3. For comparison, the results of first-principles calculations from reference [11] are given, as well as the classical MD modeling carried out in reference [11] with potentials [12,13,14]. The column “Ab initio” shows the energies of formation of the pairs of split interstitial cation (position Ta)–remote cation vacancy. We calculated these values based on the data from Table 2 and Table 3 of [11]. The formation energy of the pair interstitial oxygen (Ta)–remote vacancy could not be determined from the data of [11]. The column “Close pairs” contains the formation energies of close Frenkel pairs calculated in reference [11] from the first-principles. The column “Classical MD” lists the formation energies of close Frenkel pairs calculated in [11] using classical interaction potentials [12,13,14].
First-principles calculations [11] were performed using density functional theory (DFT) with the projector augmented wave (PAW) method [35] and the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) exchange-correlation functional [36]. The first-principles calculation of the lattice constants in [11] yielded values of a = 6.838 Å and c = 6.048 Å. These results are more accurate than those obtained in the present work, though they still exhibit the same trend of underestimating the constant a while overestimating the constant c.
The classical potentials [12,13,14] included the Coulomb interaction of the effective charges along with the valence interactions described by exponential repulsion and dispersive attraction (in the form of the Buckingham potential). The effective ionic charges were set as qp = +3.0·ē, qy = +1.8·ē, and qo = −1.2·ē. In addition to pair potentials, the model accounted for bond bending interactions of O–P–O and P–O–P [14] in the form E(α) = 1.75·(α − 109.47°) eV, where α is the angle formed by the three particles.
As can be seen from Table 3, the energy of formation of the oxygen Frenkel pair obtained in the present work is closer to the first-principles calculation [11] than the value calculated with the alternative classical potentials [12,13,14]. The coincidence of this energy with the first-principles calculation [11] can be quantitative, if the formation energies of the close and remote Frenkel pairs are similar. The formation energy of the yttrium Frenkel pair is also close to the ab initio calculation.
On the other hand, the disordering energy of the phosphorus sublattice in this work is fundamentally underestimated relative to reference [11]. This is due to the use of the pair potential “two exponents” with a deep minimum for modeling the phosphorus–oxygen covalent bond. In the present work, the interaction potentials did not depend on the environment of the particles. As a consequence, the interstitial phosphorus ion formed strong bonds with the nearest oxygen ions that were already bound to another phosphorus ion. Thus, the potentials proposed in this work seem to be applicable only to those processes in which PO4 complexes retain their integrity.

5. Conclusions

In this paper, empirical parameters of pair interaction potentials, as well as effective charges of yttrium, phosphorus, and oxygen ions, are obtained for classical molecular dynamic modeling of a YPO4 crystal. The set of pair interaction potentials enabled stable molecular dynamics simulation of isolated YPO4 crystals with free surface in the temperature range from 300 K to 2000 K. At a temperature of T = 2200, a process of disordering of the crystal lattice was registered, which may be associated with melting.
The restored lattice parameters are close to experimental values, and the thermal expansion coefficient at low temperatures quantitatively agrees with the experimental data. During the simulations, the PO4 complexes behaved as structural units of the crystal, bonded to yttrium ions. In particular, thermal expansion led to an increase in the P–Y and P–P distances, whereas the P–O distance remained almost unchanged.
The calculated energy of the formation of the Frenkel defect in the oxygen and yttrium sublattices are close to the first-principles calculations [11]. The energy of Frenkel disordering of the oxygen sublattice obtained in this work is significantly closer to the first-principles calculation [11] than the value received in [11] using existing classical interaction potentials [12,13,14].
The proposed potentials can be applied to study phenomena related to thermal and impurity-induced disordering in YPO4 crystals, vacancy transport in the yttrium and oxygen sublattices, interactions of the vacancies with activator ions, as well as vacancy–vacancy interactions.
Modeling the interaction of defects with each other, including the formation of their complexes, is of particular importance for YPO4. For example, Y–O vacancy complexes provide hole traps with distributed (non-discrete) activation energy [4]. In turn, the hole traps in YPO4 play a crucial role in determining the characteristics of long-lasting luminescence in the UV-C spectral range [37].
We believe that the interatomic potentials developed in this work can be directly applied to model YPO4 crystals doped with trivalent impurities (Eu3+, Tb3+, Dy3+, Ce3+) without any modifications, provided that the effective charge of these dopants matches that of the Y3+ ion. In this case, no adjustments to the oxygen and phosphorus charges would be required.
For aliovalent doping (e.g., with Me2+ cations), charge compensation mechanisms must be considered. One possible mechanism involves the formation of anion vacancies, resulting in hypostoichiometric (Y,Me)PO4−x crystals. Our potentials remain applicable for modeling such systems, as well as undoped nonstoichiometric crystals YPOx. This requires maintaining the original effective charge of oxygen ions while assigning vacancies a charge equal in magnitude but opposite in sign to that of oxygen.
The pair potential reconstruction methodology developed here for YPO4 can be extended to other rare-earth phosphates. An advantage of our approach lies in describing the strong (chemical) P–O bonding through a double-exponential Morse potential with a deep minimum at ~1.5 Å. This treatment considers the PO4 complex as a structural unit whose size and geometry remain nearly invariant across different phosphate crystals, which is consistent with the experimental data [15,17,31]. We anticipate that the P–O and O–O potentials obtained here could be transferred to other rare-earth phosphates with minor adjustments. The main limiting factor would be their dependence on effective charges, which may vary in different crystal systems. Similarly, the Y–O potential could be adapted to other systems featuring comparable effective charges for yttrium and oxygen.
Another distinctive feature of this work is the implementation of a damping function [25] for the dispersive attraction at short distances. This modification enables the physically meaningful application of our O–O potential at small interatomic separations where unphysical growth of the C/r6 term would otherwise become problematic.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, K.A.N. and Y.A.K.; methodology, K.A.N.; software, K.A.N.; validation, K.A.N., Y.A.K. and D.V.R.; formal analysis, K.A.N. and Y.A.K.; investigation, K.A.N.; resources, D.V.R.; data curation, Y.A.K.; writing—original draft preparation, K.A.N., Y.A.K., D.V.R. and V.V.P.; writing—review and editing, K.A.N., Y.A.K. and V.V.P.; visualization, K.A.N., Y.A.K. and V.V.P.; supervision, D.V.R.; funding acquisition, Y.A.K. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article; further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding authors.

Acknowledgments

The research was supported by the Russian Science Foundation project no. 24-72-00066.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

References

  1. Lecointre, A.; Bessiere, A.; Bos, J.J.; Dorenbos, P.; Viana, B.; Jacquart, S. Designing a Red Persistent Luminescence Phosphor: The Example of YPO4: Pr3+, Ln3+ (Ln = Nd, Er, Ho, Dy). J. Phys. Chem. C 2011, 115, 4217–4227. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Paradisi, E.; Mortalo, C.; Zin, V.; Armetta, F.; Boiko, V.; Hreniak, D.; Zapparoli, M.; Deamdrosis, S.M.; Miorin, E. Eu-Doped YPO4 Luminescent Nanopowders for Anticounterfeiting Applications: Tuning Morphology and Optical Properties by a Rapid Microwave-Assisted Hydrothermal Method. ACS Appl. Nano Mater. 2024, 7, 6893–6905. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Lai, H.; Bao, A.; Yang, Y.; Tao, Y.; Yang, H.; Zhang, Y.; Han, L. UV Luminescence Property of YPO4: RE (RE = Ce3+, Tb3+). J. Phys. Chem. C 2007, 112, 282–286. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Liu, Q.; Feng, Z.Y.; Li, H.; Zhao, Q.; Shirahata, N.; Kuroiwa, Y.; Moriyoshi, C.; Duan, C.K.; Sun, H.T. Non-Rare-Earth UVC Persistent Phosphors Enabled by Bismuth Doping. Adv. Opt. Mater. 2021, 9, 2002065. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Chuang, S.H.; Lin, H.C.; Chen, C.H. Oxygen vacancy relationship to photoluminescence and heat treatment methods in hafnium oxide powders. J. Alloys Compd. 2012, 534, 42–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Altunal, V.; Güçkan, V.; Yegingil, Z. Effects of oxygen vacancies on luminescence characteristics of BeO ceramics. J. Alloys Compd. 2023, 938, 168670. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Linderälv, C.; Åberg, D.; Erhart, P. Luminescence Quenching via Deep Defect States: A Recombination Pathway via Oxygen Vacancies in Ce-Doped YAG. Chem. Mater. 2020, 33, 73–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Chudinovych, O.V.; Andrievskaya, O.R.; Bogatyryova, J.D.; Kovylyaev, V.V. Phase equilibria in the La2O3-Y2O3-Nd2O3 system at 1500 °C. J. Eur. Ceram. Soc. 2021, 41, 6606–6616. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Li, Y.; Gecevicius, M.; Qiu, J. Long persistent phosphors—From fundamentals to applications. Chem. Soc. Rev. 2016, 45, 2090–2136. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Hao, R.; Xiong, C.; Li, H.; Lin, S.; Long, S.; Ma, D.; Wang, B. Optimization of persistent luminescence via dopant concentration in LiNbO3. J. Lumin. 2022, 244, 118753. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Gao, F.; Xiao, H.Y.; Zhou, Y.G.; Devanathan, R.; Hu, S.Y.; Li, Y.L.; Sun, X.; Khaleel, M.A. Ab initio study of defect properties in YPO4. Comput. Mater. Sci. 2012, 54, 170–175. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Du, J.; Am, J. Molecular Dynamics Simulations of the Structure and Properties of Low Silica Yttrium Aluminosilicate Glasses. Ceram. Soc. 2009, 92, 87–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Clark, E.B.; Mead, R.N.; Mountjoy, G. A molecular dynamics model of the atomic structure of Tb metaphosphate glass (Tb2O3)0.25(P2O5)0.75. J. Phys. Condens. Matter. 2006, 18, 6815. [Google Scholar]
  14. Liang, J.J.; Cygan, R.T.; Alam, T.M. Molecular Dynamics Simulation of the Structure and Properties of Lithium Phosphate Glasses. J. Non-Cryst. Solids 2000, 263–264, 167–179. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Chapman, A.C.; Long, D.A.; Jones, D.T.S. Spectra of phosphorous compounds—II. The force constants of orthophosphates. Spectrochim. Acta 1965, 21, 633–640. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Schopper, H.C.; Urban, W.; Ebel, H. Measurements of the temperature dependence of the lattice parameters of some rare earth compounds with zircon structure. Solid State Commun. 1972, 11, 955–958. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Ni, Y.; Hughes, J.M.; Mariano, A.N. Crystal chemistry of the monazite and xenotime structures. Am. Mineral. 1995, 80, 21–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Momma, K.; Izumi, F. VESTA 3 for three-dimensional visualization of crystal, volumetric and morphology data. J. Appl. Crystallogr. 2011, 44, 1272–1276. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Kevorkov, A.M.; Karyagin, V.F.; Munchaev, A.I.; Uyukin, E.M.; Bolotina, N.B.; Chernaya, T.S.; Bagdasarov, K.S.; Simonov, V.I. Y2O3 Single Crystals: Growth, Structure, and Photoinduced Effects. Crystallogr. Rep. (Transl. Krist.) 1995, 40, 23–26. [Google Scholar]
  20. Kittel, C. Introduction to Solid-State Physics, 8th ed.; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: Atlantic Highlands, NC, USA, 2008; pp. 47–80. [Google Scholar]
  21. Potashnikov, S.I.; Boyarchenkov, A.S.; Nekrasov, K.A.; Kupryazhkin, A.Y. High-precision molecular dynamics simulation of UO2–PuO2: Pair potentials comparison in UO2. J. Nucl. Mater. 2011, 419, 217–225. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Mooney, R.W.; Toma, S.Z.; Goldsmith, R.L.; Butler, K.H. Normal vibrations of the PO43− ion, site symmetry C3v, IN Sr3(PO4)2 and Ba3(PO4)2. J. Inorg. Nucl. Chem. V. 1968, 30, 1669–1675. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Morse, P.M. Diatomic molecules according to the wave mechanics. II. Vibrational levels. Phys. Rev. 1929, 34, 57–64. [Google Scholar]
  24. Fowler, P.W.; Harding, J.H.; Pyper, N.C. The polarizabilities and dispersion coefficients for ions in the solid group IV oxides. J. Phys. Condens. Matter. 1994, 6, 10593–10606. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Wood, C.P.; Pyper, N.C. Relativistic AB Initio Calculations of Interaction Energies: Formulation and Application to Ionic Solids, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Ser. A. Math. Phys. Sci. 1986, 320, 71–105. [Google Scholar]
  26. Berendsen, H.J.C.; Postma, J.V.; van Gunsteren, W.F.; DiNola, A.; Haak, J.R. Molecular-Dynamics with Coupling to an External Bath. J. Chem. Phys. 1984, 81, 3684–3690. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Nosé, S. A unified formulation of the constant temperature molecular-dynamics methods. J. Chem. Phys. 1984, 81, 511–519. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Hoover, W.G. Canonical dynamics: Equilibrium phase-space distributions. Phys. Rev. A. 1985, 31, 1695–1697. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  29. Bussi, G.; Donadio, D.; Parinello, M. Canonical sampling through velocity rescaling. J. Chem. Phys. 2007, 126, 014101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Nekrasov, K.A.; Seitov, D.D.; Pomosova, A.A.; Kupryazhkin, A.Y.; Gupta, S.K.; Usseinov, A.B. Sputtering of material from the surface of PuO2 crystals by collision cascades impact. A molecular dynamics study. Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. Sect. B Beam Interact. Mater. At. 2020, 475, 39–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Wang, Y.; Chen, X.; Liu, L.; Cheng, W.; Zhang, L. Exploration of YPO4 as a potential environmental barrier coating. Ceram. Int. 2010, 36, 755–759. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Hikichi, Y.; Nomura, T. Melting Temperatures of Monazite and Xenotime. J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 1987, 10, 252–253. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Grechanovsky, A.E.; Eremin, N.N.; Urusov, V.S. Radiation Resistance of LaPO4 (Monazite Structure) and YbPO4 (Zircon Structure) from Data of Computer Simulation. Phys. Solid State 2013, 55, 1929–1935. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Ryabov, V.A. Dynamics on a torus. Phys. Rev. E 2005, 71, 016111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  35. Kresse, G.; Joubert, D. From ultrasoft pseudopotentials to the projector augmented-wave method. Phys. Rev. B 1999, 59, 1758. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Perdew, J.P.; Chevary, J.P.; Vosko, S.H.; Jackson, K.A.; Pederson, M.R.; Singh, D.J.; Fiolhais, C. Atoms, molecules, solids, and surfaces: Applications of the generalized gradient approximation for exchange and correlation. Phys. Rev. B 1992, 46, 6671. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Kuznetsova, Y.A.; Ogorodnikov, I.N.; Raikov, D.V.; Kiselev, S.A.; Voynov, V.S.; Mashkovtsev, M.A.; Khionin, D.V.; Chukin, A.V.; Gorodnichiy, E.K. Radiation dose dependence of the Bi3+ luminescence in YPO4. J. Lumin. 2025, 282, 121222. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Structure of isolated ion PO43−.
Figure 1. Structure of isolated ion PO43−.
Crystals 15 00386 g001
Figure 2. Unit cell of YPO4. Image (a) is the symmetrized cell. Images (b) and (c) show position of interstitial site Ta (orange sphere) in two orthogonal projections. Images were prepared with VESTA application (Ver. 3.4.4) [18].
Figure 2. Unit cell of YPO4. Image (a) is the symmetrized cell. Images (b) and (c) show position of interstitial site Ta (orange sphere) in two orthogonal projections. Images were prepared with VESTA application (Ver. 3.4.4) [18].
Crystals 15 00386 g002
Figure 3. Model crystallite of YPO4 isolated in vacuum, T = 1300 K; (a) initial configuration, view in plane system (001); (b) configuration at model time t = 24 ns, view in plane system (001); (c) initial configuration, view in plane system (100); (d) configuration at model time t = 24 ns, initial configuration, view in plane system (100). Image was prepared with VESTA application (Ver. 3.4.4) [18].
Figure 3. Model crystallite of YPO4 isolated in vacuum, T = 1300 K; (a) initial configuration, view in plane system (001); (b) configuration at model time t = 24 ns, view in plane system (001); (c) initial configuration, view in plane system (100); (d) configuration at model time t = 24 ns, initial configuration, view in plane system (100). Image was prepared with VESTA application (Ver. 3.4.4) [18].
Crystals 15 00386 g003
Figure 4. Dependence of specific volume of model YPO4 crystals on time during computational experiment, T = 1300 K.
Figure 4. Dependence of specific volume of model YPO4 crystals on time during computational experiment, T = 1300 K.
Crystals 15 00386 g004
Figure 5. Dependence of calculated lattice constants of model YPO4 crystals on system size [31].
Figure 5. Dependence of calculated lattice constants of model YPO4 crystals on system size [31].
Crystals 15 00386 g005
Figure 6. Dependence of specific volume of model YPO4 crystals on temperature [31].
Figure 6. Dependence of specific volume of model YPO4 crystals on temperature [31].
Crystals 15 00386 g006
Figure 7. Dependence of lattice parameters of model YPO4 crystals on temperature [31].
Figure 7. Dependence of lattice parameters of model YPO4 crystals on temperature [31].
Crystals 15 00386 g007
Figure 8. Temperature dependence of linear expansion coefficient of model YPO4 crystals [16,31].
Figure 8. Temperature dependence of linear expansion coefficient of model YPO4 crystals [16,31].
Crystals 15 00386 g008
Figure 9. The split interstitial yttrium (a) and phosphorus (b) ions in the model crystal YPO4 at a temperature of T = 25 K. The image was created with the VESTA application (Ver. 3.4.4) [18].
Figure 9. The split interstitial yttrium (a) and phosphorus (b) ions in the model crystal YPO4 at a temperature of T = 25 K. The image was created with the VESTA application (Ver. 3.4.4) [18].
Crystals 15 00386 g009
Table 1. Parameters of interaction potentials in Equations (1)–(3).
Table 1. Parameters of interaction potentials in Equations (1)–(3).
ParameterP–OY–OO–O
A, eV2419.91691.1
B, Å−13.81703.3755
C, eV·Å−674.796
ε, eV3.5295
β, Å−17.0
Rm, Å1.5071
Table 2. Positions of first maximum of radial distribution functions of crystal ions relative to phosphorus.
Table 2. Positions of first maximum of radial distribution functions of crystal ions relative to phosphorus.
Pair of ParticlesDistance, 10−10 m
300 K1600 KExperiment (293 K)
P–O1.501.501.54
P–Y3.0253.0663.014
P–P3.693.753.76
Table 3. Calculated energies of formation of Frenkel defects in YPO4.
Table 3. Calculated energies of formation of Frenkel defects in YPO4.
Disordered SublatticeEnergies of Formation of Frenkel Defects, eV
This WorkAb Initio [11]Close Pairs [11]Classical MD [11]
Yttrium13.9 ± 0.116.27.3713.7
Oxygen4.7 ± 0.14.4311.2
Phosphorus6.9 ± 0.528.716.7518.9
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Nekrasov, K.A.; Kuznetsova, Y.A.; Raikov, D.V.; Pchelnikov, V.V. A Set of Interaction Potentials for Molecular Dynamics Simulations of YPO4 Crystal. Crystals 2025, 15, 386. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15050386

AMA Style

Nekrasov KA, Kuznetsova YA, Raikov DV, Pchelnikov VV. A Set of Interaction Potentials for Molecular Dynamics Simulations of YPO4 Crystal. Crystals. 2025; 15(5):386. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15050386

Chicago/Turabian Style

Nekrasov, Kirill A., Yulia A. Kuznetsova, Dmitry V. Raikov, and Vyacheslav V. Pchelnikov. 2025. "A Set of Interaction Potentials for Molecular Dynamics Simulations of YPO4 Crystal" Crystals 15, no. 5: 386. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15050386

APA Style

Nekrasov, K. A., Kuznetsova, Y. A., Raikov, D. V., & Pchelnikov, V. V. (2025). A Set of Interaction Potentials for Molecular Dynamics Simulations of YPO4 Crystal. Crystals, 15(5), 386. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15050386

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop