6533b835fe1ef96bd129f4df

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Unveiling the role of the lone electron pair in sesquioxides at high pressure: compressibility of β-Sb2O3

A. L. J. PereiraJuan Angel SansCatalin PopescuJulio Pellicer-porresFrancisco Javier ManjonJavier Ruiz-fuertesJordi IbáñezVanesa P. Cuenca-gotorJulia Contreras-garcíaVirginia MonteseguroVirginia MonteseguroAlfonso MunozPlácida Rodríguez-hernández

subject

Raman scatteringPhase transitionMaterials sciencePhononAb initioThermodynamics02 engineering and technologyValentinite01 natural sciencesVibrational propertiesInorganic ChemistrySb2O3Phase (matter)0103 physical sciences010302 applied physicsElectron pairStructural propertiesCompressibility021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyX-ray diffractionHigh pressureElectronic propertiesFISICA APLICADAX-ray crystallographyCompressibility0210 nano-technologyElectronic density

description

The structural, vibrational and electronic properties of the compressed beta-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.

https://doi.org/10.1039/d1dt00268f