Lithium iron phosphate, LiFePO4, a widely used cathode
material in commercial Li-ion batteries, unveils a complex defect
structure, which is still being deciphered. Using a combined computational
and experimental approach comprising density functional theory (DFT)+U and molecular dynamics calculations and X-ray and neutron
diffraction, we provide a comprehensive characterization of various
OH point defects in LiFePO4, including their formation,
dynamics, and localization in the interstitial space and at Li, Fe,
and P sites. It is demonstrated that one, two, and four (five) OH
groups can effectively stabilize Li, Fe, and P vacancies, respectively.
The presence of D (H) at both Li and P sites for hydrothermally synthesized
deuterium-enriched LiFePO4 is confirmed by joint X-ray
and neutron powder diffraction structure refinement at 5 K that also
reveals a strong deficiency of P of 6%. The P occupancy decrease is
explained by the formation of hydrogarnet-like P/4H and P/5H defects,
which have the lowest formation energies among all considered OH defects.
Molecular dynamics simulation shows a rich structural diversity of
these defects, with OH groups pointing both inside and outside vacant
P tetrahedra creating numerous energetically close conformers, which
hinders their explicit localization with diffraction-based methods
solely. The discovered conformers include structural water molecules,
which are only by 0.04 eV/atom H higher in energy than separate OH
defects.