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Pressure-induced polymerization of aromatic compounds leads to novel materials containing sp3 carbon-bonded networks. The choice of the molecular species and the control of their arrangement in the crystal structures via intermolecular interactions, such as the arene-perfluoroarene interaction, can enable the design of target polymers. We have investigated the crystal structure compression and pressure-induced polymerization reaction kinetics of two polycyclic 1:1 arene-perfluoroarene cocrystals, naphthalene/octafluoronaphthalene (NOFN) and anthracene/octafluoronaphthalene (AOFN), up to 25 and 30 GPa, respectively, using single-crystal synchrotron X-ray diffraction, infrared spectroscopy, and theoretical computations based on density-functional theory. Our study shows the remarkable pressure stability of the parallel arene-perfluoroarene π-stacking arrangement and a reduction of the interplanar π-stacking separations by ca. 19-22% before the critical reaction distance is reached. A further strong, discontinuous, and irreversible reduction along the stacking direction at 20 GPa in NOFN (18.8%) and 25 GPa in AOFN (8.7%) indicates the pressure-induced breakdown of π-stacking by formation of σ-bonded polymers. The association of the structural distortion with the occurrence of a chemical reaction is confirmed by a high-pressure kinetic study using infrared spectroscopy, indicating one-dimensional polymer growth. Structural predictions for the fully polymerized high-pressure phases consisting of highly ordered rods of hydrofluorocarbons are presented based on theoretical computations, which are in excellent agreement with the experimentally determined unit-cell parameters. We show that the polymerization takes place along the arene-perfluoroarene π-stacking direction and that the lateral extension of the columns depends on the extension of the arene and perfluoroarene molecules.
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We present a study of the pressure dependence of the structure of partially hydrated hexagonal CePO4 up to 21 GPa using synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction. At a pressure of 10 GPa, a second-order structural phase transition is observed, associated with a novel polymorph. The previously unknown high-pressure phase has a monoclinic structure with a similar atomic arrangement as the low-pressure phase, but with reduced symmetry, belonging to space group C2. Group-subgroup relations hold for the space symmetry groups of both structures. There is no detectable volume discontinuity at the phase transition. Here we provide structural information on the new phase and determine the axial compressibility and bulk modulus for both phases. They are found to have an anisotropic behavior and to be much more compressible than the denser monazite-like polymorph of CePO4. In addition, the isothermal compressibility tensor for the high-pressure structure is reported at 10 GPa and the direction of maximum compressibility described. Finally, the possible role of water and the pressure medium in the high-pressure behavior is discussed. The results are compared with those from other rare-earth orthophosphates.
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We report on high-pressure and high-temperature angle-dispersive synchrotron X-ray diffraction and high-pressure Raman data up to 27 GPa and 700 K for natural silicate carbonate Ca5(SiO4)2(CO3) spurrite mineral. No phase transition was found in the studied P-T range. The room-temperature bulk modulus of spurrite using Ne as the pressure-transmitting medium is B0 = 77(1) GPa with a first-pressure derivative of B0' = 5.9(2). The structure compression is highly anisotropic, the b axis being approximately 30% more compressible than the a and c axes. The volumetric thermal expansivity value around 8 GPa was estimated to be 4.1(3) × 10-5 K-1. A comparison with intimately related minerals CaCO3 calcite and aragonite and ß-Ca2SiO4 larnite shows that, as the composition and structural features of spurrite suggest, its compressibility and thermal expansivity lie between those of the silicate and carbonate end members. The crystal chemistry and thermodynamic properties of spurrite are discussed.
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In this work, we present an experimental and theoretical study of the effects of high pressure and high temperature on the structural properties of olivine-type LiNiPO4. This compound is part of an interesting class of materials primarily studied for their potential use as electrodes in lithium-ion batteries. We found that the original olivine structure (α-phase) is stable up to â¼40 GPa. Above this pressure, the onset of a new phase is observed, as put in evidence by the X-ray diffraction (XRD) experiments. The structural refinement shows that the new phase (known as ß-phase) belongs to space group Cmcm. At room temperature, the two phases coexist at least up to 50 GPa. A complete conversion to the ß-phase was only obtained at high-pressure and high-temperature conditions (973 K, 6.5 GPa), as confirmed by both XRD and Raman spectroscopy. Ab initio calculations support the same structural sequence. The need of high-temperature conditions to obtain the complete transformation of the α-phase into the ß-phase is indicative of the existence of a kinetic barrier for the phase transition. Here, we report the evolution of crystallographic parameters as a function of pressure for both phases, comparing them with the theoretical predictions. We also discuss the influence of pressure on the polyhedral units and report room-temperature equations of state. The dependence of the Raman phonons of both phases on pressure is also studied, assigning to each phonon its respective symmetry by comparison with the results of the ab initio simulations.
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The high-pressure behavior of the crystalline structure FeVO4 has been studied by means of X-ray diffraction using a diamond-anvil cell and first-principles calculations. The experiments were carried out up to a pressure of 12.3 GPa, until now the highest pressure reached to study an FeVO4 compound. High-pressure X-ray diffraction measurements show that the triclinic P1Ì (FeVO4-I) phase remains stable up to ≈3 GPa; then a first-order phase transition to a new monoclinic polymorph of FeVO4 (FeVO4-II') with space group C2/ m is observed, having an α-MnMoO4-type structure. A second first-order phase transition is observed around 5 GPa toward the monoclinic ( P2/ c) wolframite-type FeVO4-IV structure, which is stable up to 12.3 GPa in coexistence with FeVO4-II'. The unit cell volume reductions for the first and second phase transitions are Δ V = -8.5% and -13.1%. It was observed that phase transitions are irreversible and both high-pressure phases remain stable once the pressure is released. Calculations were performed at the level of the generalized gradient approximation plus Hubbard correction (GGA+ U) and with the hybrid Heyd-Scuseria-Ernzerhof (HSE06) exchange-correlation functional in order to have a good representation of the pressure behavior of FeVO4. We found that theoretical results follow the pressure evolution of structural parameters of FeVO4, in good agreement with the experimental results. Also, we analyze FeVO4-II (orthorhombic Cmcm, CrVO4-type structure) and -III (orthorhombic Pbcn, α-PbO2-type structure) phases and compare our results with the literature. Going beyond the experimental results, we study some possible post-wolframite phases reported for other compounds and we found a phase transition for FeVO4-IV to raspite (monoclinic P21/ c) type structure (FeVO4-V) at 36 GPa (Δ V = -8.1%) and a further phase transition to the AgMnO4-type (monoclinic P21/ c) structure (FeVO4-VI) at 66.5 GPa (Δ V = -3.7%), similar to the phase transition sequence reported for InVO4.
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The high-pressure behavior of technologically important visible-light photocatalytic semiconductor InNbO4, adopting a monoclinic wolframite-type structure at ambient conditions, was investigated using synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopic measurements, and first-principles calculations. The experimental results indicate the occurrence of a pressure-induced isostructural phase transition in the studied compound beyond 10.8 GPa. The large volume collapse associated with the phase transition and the coexistence of two phases observed over a wide range of pressure shows the nature of transition to be first-order. There is an increase in the oxygen anion coordination number around In and Nb cations from six to eight at the phase transition. The ambient-pressure phase has been recovered on pressure release. The experimental pressure-volume data when fitted to a Birch-Murnaghan equation of states yields the value of ambient pressure bulk modulus as 179(2) and 231(4) GPa for the low- and high-pressure phases, respectively. The pressure dependence of the Raman mode frequencies and Grüneisen parameters was determined for both phases by experimental and theoretical methods. The same information is obtained for the infrared modes from first-principles calculations. Results from theoretical calculations corroborate the experimental findings. They also provide information on the compressibility of interatomic bonds, which is correlated with the macroscopic properties of InNbO4.
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The role of carbon dioxide, CO2, as oxidizing agent at high pressures and temperatures is evaluated by studying its chemical reactivity with three transition metals: Au, Pt, and Re. We report systematic X-ray diffraction measurements up to 48 GPa and 2400 K using synchrotron radiation and laser-heating diamond-anvil cells. No evidence of reaction was found in Au and Pt samples in this pressure-temperature range. In the Re + CO2 system, however, a strongly-driven redox reaction occurs at P > 8 GPa and T > 1500 K, and orthorhombic ß-ReO2 is formed. This rhenium oxide phase is stable at least up to 48 GPa and 2400 K and was recovered at ambient conditions. Raman spectroscopy data confirm graphite as a reaction product. Ab-initio total-energy structural and compressibility data of the ß-ReO2 phase shows an excellent agreement with experiments, altogether accurately confirming CO2 reduction P-T conditions in the presence of rhenium metal and the ß-ReO2 equation of state.
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The P-T phase diagram of the hydrated magnesium carbonate nesquehonite (MgCO3·3H2O) has not been reported in the literature. In this paper, we present a joint experimental and computational study of the phase stability and structural behavior of this cementitious material at high-pressure and high-temperature conditions using in situ single-crystal and synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction measurements in resistive-heated diamond anvil cells plus density functional theory calculations. Our results show that nesquehonite undergoes two pressure-induced phase transitions at 2.4 (HP1) and 4.0 GPa (HP2) at ambient temperature. We have found negative axial compressibility and thermal expansivity values, likely related to the directionality of the hydrogen bonds. The equations of state of the different phases have been determined. All the room-temperature compression effects were reversible. Heating experiments at 0.7 GPa show a first temperature-induced decomposition at 115 °C, probably into magnesite and a MgCO3·4H2O phase.
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This study presents evidence that lead metavanadate, PbV2O6, is a material with zero-linear compressibility, which maintains its crystal size in one crystallographic direction even under external pressures of up to 20 GPa. The orthorhombic polymorph of PbV2O6 (space group Pnma) was studied up to 20 GPa using synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, and density-functional theory simulations to investigate its structural and vibrational evolution under compression. Up to this pressure we find no evidence of any structural phase transitions by any diagnostic technique, however, a progressive transformation of the coordination polyhedron of vanadium atoms is revealed which results in the zero-linear compressibility. High-pressure Raman experiments enabled the identification and symmetry assignation of all 54 zone-centre Raman-active modes as well as the calculation of their respective pressure coefficients. Three independent high-pressure powder X-ray diffraction experiments were performed using different pressure-transmitting media (Ne, 4 : 1 methanol-ethanol mixture, and silicone oil). The results show a high anisotropic behaviour in the linear compressibility of the crystallographic axes. The PbV2O6 bulk modulus of 86.1(9) GPa was determined using a third-order Birch-Murnaghan equation of state. The experimental results are supported by ab initio density-functional theory calculations, which provide vibrational patterns, unit-cell parameters, and atomic positions. These calculations also reveal that, unlike MgV2O6 and ZnV2O6, the band gap of PbV2O6 closes with pressure at a rate of -54 meV GPa-1 due to the contribution of the Pb 6s orbital to the top of the valence band.
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Zircon-type PrVO4 and SmVO4 have been studied by high-pressure Raman spectroscopy up to 17 GPa. The occurrence of phase transitions has been detected when compression exceeds 6 GPa. The transformations are not reversible. Raman spectra of the high-pressure phases show similarities with those expected for a monazite-type phase in PrVO4 and a scheelite-type phase in SmVO4.The high-pressure phases have been also synthesized using a large-volume press and recovered at ambient conditions. X-ray diffraction measurements of the metastable products recovered after decompression confirms the monazite (PrVO4) and scheelite (SmVO4) structures of the high-pressure phases. Based upon optical properties of the reported new polymorphs, novel applications for rare-earth vanadates are proposed, including photocatalytic hydrogen production.
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A new wolframite-type polymorph of InVO4 is identified under compression near 7 GPa by in situ high-pressure (HP) X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Raman spectroscopic investigations on the stable orthorhombic InVO4. The structural transition is accompanied by a large volume collapse (ΔV/V = -14%) and a drastic increase in bulk modulus (from 69 to 168 GPa). Both techniques also show the existence of a third phase coexisting with the low- and high-pressure phases in a limited pressure range close to the transition pressure. XRD studies revealed a highly anisotropic compression in orthorhombic InVO4. In addition, the compressibility becomes nonlinear in the HP polymorph. The volume collapse in the lattice is related to an increase of the polyhedral coordination around the vanadium atoms. The transformation is not fully reversible. The drastic change in the polyhedral arrangement observed at the transition is indicative of a reconstructive phase transformation. The HP phase here found is the only modification of InVO4 reported to date with 6-fold coordinated vanadium atoms. Finally, Raman frequencies and pressure coefficients in the low- and high-pressure phases of InVO4 are reported.
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We report the structural behavior and compressibility of minrecordite, a naturally occurring Zn-rich dolomite mineral, determined using diamond-anvil cell synchrotron X-ray diffraction. Our data show that this rhombohedral CaZn0.52Mg0.48(CO3)2 carbonate exhibits a highly anisotropic behavior, the c axis being 3.3 times more compressible than the a axis. The axial compressibilities and the equation of state are governed by the compression of the [CaO6] and [ZnO6] octahedra, which are the cations in larger proportion in each layer. We observe the existence of a dense polymorph above 13.4(3) GPa using Ne as a pressure-transmitting medium, but the onset pressure of the phase transition decreases with the appearance of deviatoric stresses in nonhydrostatic conditions. Our results suggest that the phase transition observed in minrecordite is strain-induced and that the high-pressure polymorph is intimately related to the CaCO3-II-type structure. A comparison with other dolomite minerals indicates that the transition pressure decreases when the ratio Zn/Mg in the crystal lattice of pure dolomite is larger than 1. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations predict that a distorted CaCO3-II-type structure is energetically more stable than dolomite-type CaZn(CO3)2 above 10 GPa. However, according to our calculations, the most stable structure above this pressure is a dolomite-V-type phase, a polymorph not observed experimentally.
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The vibrational and structural behaviors of Ni3V2O8 and Co3V2O8 orthovanadates have been studied up to around 20 GPa by means of X-ray diffraction, Raman spectra, and theoretical simulations. Both materials crystallize in an orthorhombic Kagomé staircase structure (space group: Cmca) at ambient conditions, and no phase transition was found in the whole pressure range. In order to identify the symmetry of the detected Raman-active modes under high pressure, single crystal samples of those materials were used in a polarized Raman and infrared setup. Moreover, high-pressure powder X-ray diffraction measurements were performed for Co3V2O8, and the results confirmed the structure stability also obtained by other diagnostic techniques. From this XRD analysis, the anisotropic compressibilities of all axes were calculated and the unit-cell volume vs pressure was fitted by a Birch-Murnaghan equation of state, obtaining a bulk modulus of 122 GPa.
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The structural, vibrational and electronic properties of the compressed ß-Sb2O3 polymorph, a.k.a. mineral valentinite, have been investigated in a joint experimental and theoretical study up to 23 GPa. The compressibility of the lattice parameters, unit-cell volume and polyhedral unit volume as well as the behaviour of its Raman- and IR-active modes under compression have been interpreted on the basis of ab initio theoretical simulations. Valentinite shows an unusual compressibility up to 15 GPa with four different pressure ranges, whose critical pressures are 2, 4, and 10 GPa. The pressure dependence of the main structural units, the lack of soft phonons, and the electronic density charge topology address the changes at those critical pressures to isostructural phase transitions of degree higher than 2. In particular, the transitions at 2 and 4 GPa can be ascribed to the changes in the interaction between the stereochemically-active lone electron pairs of Sb atoms under compression. The changes observed above 10 GPa, characterized by a general softening of several Raman- and IR-active modes, point to a structural instability prior to the 1st-order transition occurring above 15 GPa. Above this pressure, a tentative new high-pressure phase (s.g. Pcc2) has been assigned by single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction measurements.
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AlPO4 belongs to the berlinite quartz homeotype family, which has been the subject of intense high-pressure research triggered by the supposed existence of reversible pressure-induced amorphization. X-ray diffraction experiments, complemented with ab initio calculations, demonstrate the existence of two high-pressure crystalline polymorphs and show that AlPO4 shares the same two-stage densification mechanism as silica. In the first step, a compact hexagonal sublattice of oxygen atoms is formed. In the second step, the cations redistribute in the interstices giving rise to a monoclinic distorted CaCl2 phase. The most outstanding feature of the phase is that phosphorous becomes six-fold coordinated by oxygen, adopting a configuration unknown so far in solid-state science. This finding opens possibilities in the high-pressure chemistry of phosphorus. The close relationship of AlPO4 with silica suggests the existence of completely unexplored families of compounds analogous to those of six-fold-coordinated silicates but based on PO6.