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1.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(93): 12971-12974, 2022 Nov 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36326033

RESUMEN

Substituting 2 O2- ⇒ N3- + H- in LiLa2HO3 yields dark-brown heteroanionic hydrides, which were synthesized by solid-state reactions from Li3N, LaH3 (and La2O3). They crystallize in the K2NiF4 type structure with mixed H/N sites in LiLa2N1.5H2.5 and with mixed N/O sites in LiLa2N0.84(6)H1.56(3)O1.16(6). The latter is a semiconductor with small band gap and partly covalent Li-H interaction.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 60(23): 17775-17782, 2021 Dec 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34792346

RESUMEN

Mixed anionic hydrides of the rare earths are a fascinating class of compounds as potential functional materials, especially in luminescence, as photochromic thin films and for ion conduction. For exploratory studies, the effectiveness of various synthesis methods must be investigated, which is done here for metathesis reactions. The reaction of Sm2O3 with PTFE yields SmOF (P21/c, a = 5.60133(19) Å, b = 5.65567(19) Å, c = 5.6282(2) Å, ß = 90.169(5)°, V = 178.295(11) Å3, and Z = 4) in a new, probably metastable, polymorph of the baddeleyite-type structure. Metathesis reactions of SmOF with LiH, NaH, or CaH2 led to a samarium hydride oxide fluoride, SmHxOF1-x; i.e., incomplete H/F exchange occurs. X-ray diffraction and neutron diffraction on a compound with x = 0.78 obtained via NaH reveal hydride, oxide, and fluoride ions to be partially ordered. SmH0.78OF0.22 (Ia3̅, a = 10.947(2) Å, V = 1311.7(4) Å3, Z = 32) crystallizes in an anti-Li3AlN2-type structure with distorted cubic anion coordination for samarium atoms (site symmetry 3̅ and 2) and distorted tetrahedral arrangement of samarium atoms around the anions (site symmetry 1 and 3). It is a fully structurally characterized hydride oxide fluoride and shows a rare crystal chemical feature─the occupation of a crystallographic site by three different anions (0.188 H + 0.667 O + 0.145 F). Interatomic distances between samarium and hydrogen and samarium and the mixed hydrogen/oxygen/fluorine site range from 2.45 to 2.48 Å and 2.29 to 2.42 Å, respectively, and are similar to those in samarium hydride, samarium oxide, and samarium fluoride. Fluoride extraction by reaction with alkali and alkaline earth hydrides has thus proven to be a useful synthesis route to hydride oxides and also hydride oxide halogenides, which might be further exploited in exploratory research on heteroanionic metal hydrides.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 60(6): 3972-3979, 2021 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33656854

RESUMEN

The substitution of hydrogen for oxygen atoms in metal oxides provides opportunities for influencing the solid-state properties. Such hydride oxides (or oxyhydrides) are potential functional materials and scarce. Here, we present the synthesis and characterization of holmium hydride oxide with the stoichiometric composition HoHO. It was prepared by the reaction of Ho2O3 with either HoH3 or CaH2 as a powder of light-yellow color in sunlight and pink color in artificial light (Alexandrite effect), which is commonly observed for ionic Ho(III) compounds. HoHO crystallizes with an ordered fluorite superstructure (F4̅3m, a = 5.27550(13) Å, half-Heusler LiAlSi type), as evidenced by powder X-ray and neutron powder diffraction on both hydride and deuteride and supported by quantum-mechanical calculations. HoHO is the first representative with considerable ionic bonding for this structure type. The thermal stability and inertness toward air are remarkably high for a hydride because it reacts only above 540 K to form Ho2O3. At 294(1) K and 25(3)% relative humidity, HoHO is stable for at least 3 months. HoHO is paramagnetic with µeff(Ho3+) = 10.41(2) µB without any sign of magnetic ordering down to 2 K.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 58(21): 14635-14641, 2019 Nov 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31626539

RESUMEN

Metal hydride oxides are an emerging field in solid-state research. While some lanthanide hydride oxides (LnHO) were known, YHO has only been found in thin films so far. Yttrium hydride oxide, YHO, can be synthesized as bulk samples by a reaction of Y2O3 with hydrides (YH3, CaH2), by a reaction of YH3 with CaO, or by a metathesis of YOF with LiH or NaH. X-ray and neutron powder diffraction reveal an anti-LiMgN type structure for YHO (Pnma, a = 7.5367(3) Å, b = 3.7578(2) Å, and c = 5.3249(3) Å) and YDO (Pnma, a = 7.5309(3) Å, b = 3.75349(13) Å, and c = 5.3192(2) Å); in other words, a distorted fluorite type with ordered hydride and oxide anions was observed. Bond lengths (average 2.267 Å (Y-O), 2.352 Å (Y-H), 2.363 Å (Y-D), >2.4 Å (H-H and D-D), >2.6 Å (H-O and D-O), and >2.8 Å (O-O)) and quantum-mechanical calculations on density functional theory level (band gap 2.8 eV) suggest yttrium hydride oxide to be a semiconductor and to have considerable ionic bonding character. Nonetheless, YHO exhibits a surprising stability in air. An in situ X-ray diffraction experiment shows that decomposition of YHO to Y2O3 starts at only above 500 K and is still not complete after 14 h of heating to a final temperature of 1000 K. YHO hydrolyzes in water very slowly. The inertness of YHO in air is very beneficial for its potential use as a functional material.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 57(19): 11851-11854, 2018 Oct 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30203971

RESUMEN

LiSr2SiO4H is synthesized by solid-state reaction of LiH and α-Sr2SiO4. It crystallizes in space group P21/ m ( a = 658.63(4) pm, b = 542.36(3) pm, c = 695.01(4) pm, ß = 112.5637(9)°) as proven by X-ray and neutron diffraction, is isotypic to LiSr2SiO4F, and exhibits isolated SiO4 tetrahedra. Hydride anions are located in Li2Sr4 octahedra, which share faces to form columns, with H-H distances of 271.18(2) pm. NMR, IR, and Raman spectroscopy, density measurements, elemental analysis, and theoretical calculations confirm these results. Despite its hydridic nature, it is stable in air up to 550 K. When doped with europium, it emits bright yellow-green light with an intensity maximum at 560 nm for LiSr1.98Eu0.02SiO4H. Even after treatment in water for several hours, the solid shows luminescence. The broad emission peak is attributed to the allowed 4f65d → 4f7 transition of divalent europium. LiSr2SiO4H is the first silicate hydride, a class of compounds that might have potential as host for luminescent materials.

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