6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125d6a2
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Gold(i) sulfide: Unusual bonding and an unexpected computational challenge in a simple solid
Dominik DaisenbergerAlberto Otero-de-la-rozaErin R. JohnsonRaquel Chuliá-jordánJavier Ruiz-fuertesT. MarqueñoDavid Santamaría-pérezPlácida Rodríguez-hernándezC. MuehleMartin JansenAlfonso Muñozsubject
Bulk modulusMaterials science010405 organic chemistryGold(I) sulfideIonic bondingGeneral ChemistryCubic crystal system010402 general chemistry01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesElectronegativitychemistry.chemical_compoundChemical bondchemistryChemical physicsCovalent bondValence bond theorydescription
We report the experimental high-pressure crystal structure and equation of state of gold(I) sulfide (Au2S) determined using diamond-anvil cell synchrotron X-ray diffraction. Our data shows that Au2S has a simple cubic structure with six atoms in the unit cell (four Au in linear, and two S in tetrahedral, coordination), no internal degrees of freedom, and relatively low bulk modulus. Despite its structural simplicity, Au2S displays very unusual chemical bonding. The very similar and relatively high electronegativities of Au and S rule out any significant metallic or ionic character. Using a simple valence bond (Lewis) model, we argue that the Au2S crystal possesses two different types of covalent bonds: dative and shared. These bonds are distributed in such a way that each Au atom engages in one bond of each kind. The multiple arrangements in space of dative and shared bonds are degenerate, and the multiplicity of configurations imparts the system with multireference character, which is highly unusual for an extended solid. The other striking feature of this system is that common computational (DFT) methods fail quite spectacularly to describe it, with 20% and 400% errors in the equilibrium volume and bulk modulus, respectively. We explain this by the poor treatment of static correlation in common density-functional approximations. The fact that the solid is structurally very simple, yet presents unique chemical bonding and is unmodelable using current DFT methods, makes it an interesting case study and a computational challenge. The authors thank the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO), the Generalitat Valenciana, the Spanish Research Agency (AEI), and the European Fund for Regional Development (FEDER) for their financial support (MAT2016-75586-C4-3-P, and MAT2015-71070-REDC (MALTA Consolider), and Prometeo/2018/123 (EFIMAT)).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-01-01 |