To quickly screen for single-phased multi-principal-element materials, a so-called entropy forming ability (EFA) parameter is sometimes used as a descriptor. The higher the EFA, the higher is the propensity to form a single-phase structure, which is stabilized against separation up to a certain threshold by the configurational entropy. We have investigated this EFA descriptor with atomic relaxations in special-quasi-random structures and discovered that the EFA correlates inversely with the lattice distortion. Large atomic size differences lead to multi-phase compounds, and little size differences to single-phase compounds. Instead of configurational entropy, we therefore demonstrate the applicability of the Hume-Rothery rules to phase stability of solid solutions even in compositionally complex ceramics.
@article{arxiv.2302.00460,
title = {Explaining the Entropy Forming Ability with the atomic size mismatch},
author = {Andreas Kretschmer and Paul Heinz Mayrhofer},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2302.00460},
year = {2023}
}