Literature DB >> 19182772

Ionic high-pressure form of elemental boron.

Artem R Oganov1, Jiuhua Chen, Carlo Gatti, Yanzhang Ma, Yanming Ma, Colin W Glass, Zhenxian Liu, Tony Yu, Oleksandr O Kurakevych, Vladimir L Solozhenko.   

Abstract

Boron is an element of fascinating chemical complexity. Controversies have shrouded this element since its discovery was announced in 1808: the new 'element' turned out to be a compound containing less than 60-70% of boron, and it was not until 1909 that 99% pure boron was obtained. And although we now know of at least 16 polymorphs, the stable phase of boron is not yet experimentally established even at ambient conditions. Boron's complexities arise from frustration: situated between metals and insulators in the periodic table, boron has only three valence electrons, which would favour metallicity, but they are sufficiently localized that insulating states emerge. However, this subtle balance between metallic and insulating states is easily shifted by pressure, temperature and impurities. Here we report the results of high-pressure experiments and ab initio evolutionary crystal structure predictions that explore the structural stability of boron under pressure and, strikingly, reveal a partially ionic high-pressure boron phase. This new phase is stable between 19 and 89 GPa, can be quenched to ambient conditions, and has a hitherto unknown structure (space group Pnnm, 28 atoms in the unit cell) consisting of icosahedral B(12) clusters and B(2) pairs in a NaCl-type arrangement. We find that the ionicity of the phase affects its electronic bandgap, infrared adsorption and dielectric constants, and that it arises from the different electronic properties of the B(2) pairs and B(12) clusters and the resultant charge transfer between them.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 19182772     DOI: 10.1038/nature07736

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  8 in total

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Authors:  Artem R Oganov; Jiuhua Chen; Carlo Gatti; Yanzhang Ma; Yanming Ma; Colin W Glass; Zhenxian Liu; Tony Yu; Oleksandr O Kurakevych; Vladimir L Solozhenko
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7.  A stable compound of helium and sodium at high pressure.

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10.  Synthesis and stability of xenon oxides Xe2O5 and Xe3O2 under pressure.

Authors:  Agnès Dewaele; Nicholas Worth; Chris J Pickard; Richard J Needs; Sakura Pascarelli; Olivier Mathon; Mohamed Mezouar; Tetsuo Irifune
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