| Literature DB >> 28980991 |
Jorge González-López1, Jeremy K Cockcroft2, Ángeles Fernández-González1, Amalia Jimenez1, Ricardo Grau-Crespo3.
Abstract
The cobalt carbonate hydroxide Co2CO3(OH)2 is a technologically important solid which is used as a precursor for the synthesis of cobalt oxides in a wide range of applications. It also has relevance as a potential immobilizer of the toxic element cobalt in the natural environment, but its detailed crystal structure is so far unknown. The structure of Co2CO3(OH)2 has now been investigated using density functional theory (DFT) simulations and powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) measurements on samples synthesized via deposition from aqueous solution. Two possible monoclinic phases are considered, with closely related but symmetrically different crystal structures, based on those of the minerals malachite [Cu2CO3(OH)2] and rosasite [Cu1.5Zn0.5CO3(OH)2], as well as an orthorhombic phase that can be seen as a common parent structure for the two monoclinic phases, and a triclinic phase with the structure of the mineral kolwezite [Cu1.34Co0.66CO3(OH)2]. The DFT simulations predict that the rosasite-like and malachite-like phases are two different local minima of the potential energy landscape for Co2CO3(OH)2 and are practically degenerate in energy, while the orthorhombic and triclinic structures are unstable and experience barrierless transformations to the malachite phase upon relaxation. The best fit to the PXRD data is obtained using a rosasite model [monoclinic with space group P1121/n and cell parameters a = 3.1408 (4) Å, b = 12.2914 (17) Å, c = 9.3311 (16) Å and γ = 82.299 (16)°]. However, some features of the PXRD pattern are still not well accounted for by this refinement and the residual parameters are relatively poor. The relationship between the rosasite and malachite phases of Co2CO3(OH)2 is discussed and it is shown that they can be seen as polytypes. Based on the similar calculated stabilities of these two polytypes, it is speculated that some level of stacking disorder could account for the poor fit of the PXRD data. The possibility that Co2CO3(OH)2 could crystallize, under different growth conditions, as either rosasite or malachite, or even as a stacking-disordered phase intermediate between the two, requires further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Co2CO3(OH)2; density functional theory; malachite; powder X-ray diffraction; rosasite
Year: 2017 PMID: 28980991 PMCID: PMC5628398 DOI: 10.1107/S2052520617007983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr B Struct Sci Cryst Eng Mater ISSN: 2052-5192
Figure 1Malachite-like (top) and rosasite-like (bottom) crystal structures of Co2CO3(OH)2 as obtained from DFT calculations. The rosasite-like structure is displayed with the atomic positions shifted in a way that maximizes the coincidence with the malachite structure and does not follow the values listed in Table 2 ▸. Colour shading is used to represent alternative cells with different values of the monoclinic angle. The green-shaded cell was used for the DFT calculations. Colour code: Co blue, C grey, O red and H white.
Relative DFT energies for the malachite-like and rosasite-like structures of Co2CO3(OH)2 in the ferromagnetic (FM) and antiferromagnetic (AFM) configurations described in the main text
|
| ||
|---|---|---|
| Structure | AFM | FM |
| Malachite | 0 | 16.92 |
| Rosasite | 0.04 | 16.98 |
Figure 2(a) SEM and (b) TEM images of Co2CO3(OH)2.
Figure 3Experimental X-ray diffraction pattern (+ symbols) compared with (a) malachite-like and (b) rosasite-like (green and red lines, respectively) Rietveld refinement curves (atomic positions fixed to DFT values). (c) Difference between experimental and refined intensities for both models.
Figure 4Malachite-like and rosasite-like structures of Co2CO3(OH)2 seen as two different stacking sequences of the same two-dimensional motif. The rosasite-like structure is shown using a redefined supercell lattice for better comparison with the malachite-like structure. Colour code as in Fig. 1 ▸.
Rietveld-refined values of cell parameters are given within square brackets.
| Space group |
|
|
| 3.174 [3.1408 (4)] |
|
| 12.374 [12.2914 (18)] |
|
| 9.413 [9.3311 (16)] |
| γ (°) | 82.82 [82.299 (16)] |
| Coordinates |
|
|
|
| Co1 | 0.77660 | 0.71075 | 0.49778 |
| Co2 | 0.18314 | 0.89784 | 0.26841 |
| C | 0.38881 | 0.64742 | 0.22817 |
| O1 | 0.30694 | 0.64639 | 0.36513 |
| O2 | 0.28751 | 0.73926 | 0.15774 |
| O3 | 0.57404 | 0.56386 | 0.16515 |
| O4 | 0.70019 | 0.85789 | 0.40510 |
| O5 | 0.67413 | 0.91997 | 0.12379 |
| H1 | 0.31773 | 0.00498 | 0.90820 |
| H2 | 0.27813 | 0.09536 | 0.51076 |
Rietveld-refined values of cell parameters are given within square brackets; however, note that the quality of the fit with this model is poor – see text.
| Space group |
|
|
| 9.425 [9.307 (2)] |
|
| 12.261 [12.224 (2)] |
|
| 3.174 [3.1346 (7)] |
| β (°) | 91.12 [90.486 (16)] |
| Coordinates |
|
|
|
| Co1 | 0.00262 | 0.28894 | 0.86602 |
| Co2 | 0.73213 | 0.39792 | 0.3694 |
| C | 0.77217 | 0.14755 | 0.45237 |
| O1 | 0.63493 | 0.1467 | 0.36907 |
| O2 | 0.84296 | 0.2389 | 0.38999 |
| O3 | 0.83503 | 0.06414 | 0.60326 |
| O4 | 0.59572 | 0.3581 | 0.86532 |
| O5 | 0.87648 | 0.42001 | 0.8779 |
| H1 | 0.51153 | 0.40484 | 0.81598 |
| H2 | 0.90773 | 0.49536 | 0.83501 |