Literature DB >> 20729901

Two- and three-dimensional extended solids and metallization of compressed XeF2.

Minseob Kim1, Mathew Debessai, Choong-Shik Yoo.   

Abstract

The application of pressure, internal or external, transforms molecular solids into extended solids with more itinerant electrons to soften repulsive interatomic interactions in a tight space. Examples include insulator-to-metal transitions in O(2), Xe and I(2), as well as molecular-to-non-molecular transitions in CO(2) and N(2). Here, we present new discoveries of novel two- and three-dimensional extended non-molecular phases of solid XeF(2) and their metallization. At approximately 50 GPa, the transparent linear insulating XeF(2) transforms into a reddish two-dimensional graphite-like hexagonal layered structure of semiconducting XeF(4). Above 70 GPa, it further transforms into a black three-dimensional fluorite-like structure of the first observed metallic XeF(8) polyhedron. These simultaneously occurring molecular-to-non-molecular and insulator-to-metal transitions of XeF(2) arise from the pressure-induced delocalization of non-bonded lone-pair electrons to sp(3)d(2) hybridization in two-dimensional XeF(4) and to p(3)d(5) in three-dimensional XeF(8) through the chemical bonding of all eight valence electrons in Xe and, thereby, fulfilling the octet rule at high pressures.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20729901     DOI: 10.1038/nchem.724

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Chem        ISSN: 1755-4330            Impact factor:   24.427


  18 in total

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  8 in total

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7.  Phase Diagram and Transformations of Iron Pentacarbonyl to nm Layered Hematite and Carbon-Oxygen Polymer under Pressure.

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8.  Prediction of the Reactivity of Argon with Xenon under High Pressures.

Authors:  Xiao Z Yan; Yang M Chen; Hua Y Geng
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2019-08-19
  8 in total

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