Abstract
Chemical stability of the alkali halides NaCl and KCl has allowed for their use as inert media in high-pressure high-temperature experiments. Here we demonstrate the unexpected reactivity of the halides with metals (Y, Dy, and Re) and iron oxide (FeO) in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell, thus providing a synthetic route for halogen-containing binary and ternary compounds. So far unknown chlorides, Y2Cl and DyCl, and chloride carbides, Y2ClC and Dy2ClC, were synthesized at ~40 GPa and 2000 K and their structures were solved and refined using in situ single-crystal synchrotron X-ray diffraction. Also, FeCl2 with the HP-PdF2-type structure, previously reported at 108 GPa, was synthesized at ~160 GPa and 2100 K. The results of our ab initio calculations fully support experimental findings and reveal the electronic structure and chemical bonding in these compounds.
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Introduction
Alkali halides, particularly sodium and potassium chlorides, are chemically very stable and are usually not considered as precursors for the synthesis of new compounds in high-pressure (HP) studies. Indeed, NaCl and KCl were thought to be chemically inert over wide pressure (up to 200 GPa) and temperature (up to 3000 K) ranges1. Therefore, they have often been used as pressure calibrants2, pressure transmitting media3, and electrical and thermal insulators in HP experiments3,4,5. Recent experimental and theoretical studies6,7,8 suggest, however, that the behavior of the Na-Cl and K-Cl systems at HP is complex, and several compounds with an unusual stoichiometry (like NaCl3, Na3Cl, Na2Cl, and KCl3) have been reported. Still, NaCl and KCl are considered to be chemically stable under HP, as in the absence of ionization-promoting species9,10, reactions are found in the presence of extra chlorine or sodium/potassium in a diamond anvil cell (DAC)7,8.
Being formed by highly electropositive and electronegative elements, NaCl and KCl, having a stable electron configuration, are not expected to react with transition or rare-earth metals. In the present work we have shown that it is not the case under pressure, as our experiments, originally designed to study the HP behavior of metals (Y, Dy, Re, and Ag) in an “inert” pressure medium (NaCl) in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell (LHDAC), resulted in the synthesis of previously unknown chlorides, Y2Cl and DyCl, and chloride carbides, Y2ClC and Dy2ClC, at about 40 GPa and 2000 K. An iron chloride, FeCl2, with the HP-PdF2-type structure, was found to be a product of a chemical reaction between FeO and KCl in a LHDAC at about 160 GPa and 2100 K.
Here we report the crystal structures of the chloride phases, Y2Cl and DyCl, and chloride carbides Y2ClC and Dy2ClC, as well as the structure of iron chloride, FeCl2. The structures were solved and refined using in situ high-pressure synchrotron single-crystal X-ray diffraction in a DAC. Our ab initio calculations are in good agreement with the experimental results.
Results and discussion
Reactivity of alkali halides and heavy metals at high pressures
To conduct the experiments, pieces of metals (Y, Dy, Re, or Ag) or FeO were loaded into a DAC between two layers of dried sodium or potassium chlorides. All experiments were performed in BX90-type DACs equipped with Boehler-Almax type diamond anvils with culets of 250 or 120 μm11. NaCl or KCl served as pressure-transmitting media and turned out to also act as reactants. To facilitate a chemical reaction, the samples were laser-heated using YAG lasers with the metals serving as the absorbers.
Supplementary Table 1 provides information on all experiments carried out in this work. Silver was not found to react with NaCl after heating up to ~1950 K at ~44 GPa (Supplementary Fig. 1). Experiments with other metals, for example upon heating Dy in NaCl at ~40 GPa (Supplementary Fig. 2), optical observations provided early signs of chemical reactions. Raman spectroscopy was also helpful in some cases in giving a clear indication of a sample change after heating, like in the experiment with Re laser-heated in NaCl at ~38 GPa (Supplementary Fig. 3). However quite often Raman spectra did not yield any information on the phonon modes of the newly formed solids because of strong luminescence signals coming from the laser-heated spots.
The most reliable and accurate data on chemical reactions were obtained from XRD studies, when a chemical alteration of the sample is manifested in changes in the diffraction pattern and the products of the reactions, their chemical composition and structures, can be characterized using single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. Figure 1 shows powder diffraction patterns of the Y-NaCl sample before and after laser-heating up to ~2000 K at ~41 GPa. The pattern obtained before laser-heating displays only the presence of hcp-Y and B2-NaCl in the sample. After heating, additionally to the hcp-Y in B2-NaCl reflections, extra diffraction lines were observed (Fig. 1). The 2D XRD patterns in the insert in Fig. 1 show the appearance of numerous diffraction spots after laser heating, characteristic of single crystals. We used our approach to the high-pressure XRD data analysis12,13,14,15,16 and the DAFi program17, which we specially developed to process single-crystal XRD data from microcrystals. Processing these data revealed the formation of the previously known fcc-YC compound18, a new HP phase of Y3C4 (to be published elsewhere), and new yttrium chloride and yttrium chloride carbide (Y2Cl and Y2ClC), which are discussed in detail in this work. Similarly, chemical reactions were detected in the Dy-NaCl, FeO-KCl, and Re-NaCl systems (Supplementary Table 1 and Supplementary Figs. 1–3), and the new phases, DyCl, Dy2ClC, and FeCl2, were identified. Unfortunately, despite all our efforts, the new phases in the Re-NaCl system could not be recognized, although we observed the signs of chemical reactions both in Raman spectra and the XRD data (Supplementary Fig. 3). The crystal structures, solved and refined at HP for all phases detected in the Y-NaCl, Dy-NaCl, and FeO-KCl systems after laser heating, are described in detail below.
Structures of chlorides Y2Cl, DyCl, and FeCl2
The yttrium-chlorine compound, Y2Cl, synthesized at ~41 GPa and ~2000 K (Supplementary Table 1) crystallizes in a structure with the tetragonal space group I4/mcm (#140). Y atoms occupy the 8 h Wyckoff site with the atomic coordinates (0.659(7) 0.159(7) 1/2) while the Cl atoms occupy the 4a (0 0 1/4) site (Fig. 2a, see also the CIF deposited at CSD 2184741 and Supplementary Data 1). The lattice parameters are a = 6.128(3) Å and c = 5.405(7) Å at 41(1) GPa. The full experimental crystallographic data, including the crystal structure, data collection and refinement details of Y2Cl at 41(1) GPa are provided in Supplementary Table 2.
Yttrium atoms form 32.4.3.4 nets in the ab plane (Fig. 2b). The nets are stacked along the c direction with a ½ period and rotated by 90° from one another (Fig. 2b). The chlorine atoms are located in the centers of square antiprisms formed between the layers of Y atoms (Fig. 2c). The Y-Cl distances within the antiprisms (~2.67 Å) are compatible with those known for other yttrium chlorides at ambient conditions (YCl19,20, Y2Cl321, YCl322–2.70–2.75 Å). The striking difference is in the Cl-Cl and Y-Y distances (~2.70 Å and ~2.75 Å, correspondingly) of Y2Cl compared to the known yttrium chlorides with predominantly ionic bonding between Y and Cl and metal-metal bonding within metal frameworks (for example, 3.30–3.72 Å for Cl-Cl and 3.27–3.96 Å for Y-Y in YCl and Y2Cl3)21,23. This indicates that the “metallic radius”24 in Y2Cl is different (smaller) from those in other yttrium chlorides. This might contribute to the reduction in enthalpy, making Y2Cl a favored phase at HP. In fact, the Y2Cl compound was predicted to be metallic at 20 GPa25, and in metallic hcp yttrium at 40 GPa26 the unit cell volume per atom is ~19.9 Å3 that allows one to calculate the shortest Y-Y contact to be ~2.7 Å, which matches our measurements. Our ab initio calculations (Methods section) well reproduced the experimental crystal structure of Y2Cl at 40 GPa (Supplementary Table 2) and confirmed its dynamical stability (Supplementary Fig. 4).
The structure of dysprosium chloride, DyCl, has a hexagonal unit cell with the lattice parameters a = 3.079(19) Å and c = 7.621(5) Å at 40(1) GPa (Fig. 2d, e, see also the CIF deposited at CSD 2184740 and Supplementary Data 2), and the space group symmetry P63/mmc (#194) with the Dy atoms occupying the 2a Wyckoff site (0 0 1/2), and Cl atoms occupying the 2c site (1/3 2/3 3/4) (Table S3). In this NiAs (B8) type structure, the Cl atoms form a hexagonal close packing (hcp), in which Dy atoms occupy the centers of the edge-sharing octahedra. Although there are other rare-earth (RE) chlorides known at atmospheric pressure (RE = Sc, Y, Gd, and La)23,27,28, they possess ZrCl-type structure, which is different from that of the HP Dy and Y chlorides.
The calculated structural parameters are in good agreement with the experimental results (Supplementary Table 3). DyCl is dynamically stable at our experimental pressure (~40 GPa) and its metallic nature at 40 GPa is confirmed with the Dy-d electrons dispersed at the Fermi level due to Dy-Dy metallic bonding (Supplementary Fig. 5).
The HP phase of FeCl2 crystalized at 160(1) GPa in the HP-PdF2 type structure with the P\(a\bar{3}\) (#205) space group and the lattice parameter a = 4.829(11) Å (Fig. 2f). Fe atoms occupy the 4b Wyckoff site, while Cl atoms occupy the 8c site, and form vertex-sharing Cl6 octahedra with Fe atoms in the centers. The Fe-Fe, Fe-Cl, and Cl-Cl distances at 160(1) GPa are 3.41 Å, 1.98 Å, and 2.61 Å, respectively.
Our theoretical calculations reproduced the experimental crystal structure of FeCl2 at 150 GPa (Supplementary Table 4) and confirmed its dynamical stability down to a pressure of 90 GPa (Supplementary Fig. 6). The measured unit cell volume and the pressure-volume points from theoretical calculations are shown in Supplementary Fig. 7. The calculated bulk modulus of K0 = 96.9(14) GPa (K′ = 4.45(2); V0 = 185.5(4) Å3) was determined by fitting the third-order Birch-Murnaghan equation of state to the calculated P-V data (Supplementary Fig. 7). The calculated band structure along specific high-symmetry directions suggests that the cubic FeCl2 phase is a typical example of normal semimetals29, in which electron and hole pockets coexist on the Fermi surface (Supplementary Fig. 8).
It is worth mentioning that at ambient conditions FeCl2 (phase I) possesses the layered CdCl2-type structure (R\(\bar{3}\)m, #166), in which the chlorine atoms form a cubic close packing (ccp). Fe atoms, which fill ½ of its octahedral voids, are “sandwiched” between the two sheets of chlorine atoms30, producing Cl-Fe-Cl layers separated from each other. At low pressures (~0.6 GPa) phase I undergoes a structural transition to phase II with the hexagonal CdI2-like structure (P\(\bar{3}\)m1, #164), which is similar to that of phase I, but in phase II the chlorine atoms form a hexagonal close packing (hcp). This structure persists to 65 GPa31. At 108 GPa and 2000 K Yuan et al.9 synthesized a FeCl2 phase with the same HP-PdF2 type structure, which we observed in this work at 160 GPa, but the synthesis was realized through hydrous systems to force the ionization of NaCl.
Structures of novel chloride carbides Y2ClC and Dy2ClC
As shown in previous work32, carbon from diamond anvils, being mobilized upon laser heating, can participate in chemical reactions. In this work, this phenomenon has led to the synthesis of previously unknown ternary compounds, Y2ClC and Dy2ClC, which are isostructural (space group R\(\bar{3}\)m, #166) and with similar lattice parameters. Y and Dy atoms occupy the Wyckoff site 6c, Cl atoms occupy the 3a site, and C atoms occupy the 3b site. The full experimental crystallographic data, including the crystal structure, data collection, and refinement details for these phases are provided in Supplementary Tables 5 and 6 (see also the CIF deposited at CSD 2184739 and 2184742) (Supplementary Data 3 for Y2ClC and Supplementary Data 4 for Dy2ClC).
In the structure of the novel chloride carbides, the rare-earth atoms (Y and Dy) form a distorted cubic close packing (ccp) (Fig. 3). If one considers Cl and C as equal-size spheres, the alternating close-packed layers of C and Cl also form a distorted ccp. Thus, the structure can be described as one derived from NaCl (B1) type with carbon and chlorine atoms forming the ccp, whose octahedral voids are occupied by the rare-earth atoms. Each rare-earth atom is connected to three Cl and three C atoms (Fig. 3d). As shown in Fig. 3e, the metal-C contacts (Y-C ~2.30 Å, and Dy-C ~2.29 Å) are significantly shorter than the metal-Cl ones (Y-Cl ~2.59 Å, and Dy-Cl ~2.60 Å), as expected due to the smaller ionic radius for C atoms. But the Y-Y and Dy-Dy contacts between layers AB, CA, and BC (Fig. 3b) are relatively short (~3.15 Å), and this distance is close to that of Dy-Dy in DyCl with a metallic bonding character, as discussed above.
To gain a deeper insight into the properties of Y2ClC and Dy2ClC, we performed calculations based on density functional theory (DFT). The relaxed structural parameters (Supplementary Tables 5 and 6) closely reproduce the corresponding experimental values at 40 GPa. Harmonic phonon dispersion calculations using the Phonopy software33 show no imaginary frequencies, demonstrating the dynamical stability of R\(\bar{3}\)m Y2ClC at both 40 GPa and 1 bar (Supplementary Fig. 9). Ohmer et al.34 predicted the stability of a Y2ClC solid with a P63/mmc space group (#194), which is considered to be a MAX-type (Mn+1AXn)35,36 compound. By comparing the enthalpy values of the two phases (Supplementary Table 7), we suggest that Y2ClC will have a phase transition from R\(\bar{3}\)m to P63/mmc when the pressure is reduced to 10 GPa (Supplementary Fig. 9c). No competing phase was found for R\(\bar{3}\)m Dy2ClC, and its dynamical stability at 40 GPa is demonstrated in Supplementary Fig. 10.
Considering that Y2ClC and Dy2ClC are isostructural, the computed total and projected electron densities of states (TDOS and PDOS) are illustrated in Fig. 4a taking Y2ClC as an example. At 40 GPa, Y2ClC is a metal, as it shows a non-zero density of states at the Fermi level, and the main contribution at the Fermi level comes from the yttrium d-states. Interestingly, the calculated electron localization function (ELF) of Y2ClC at 40 GPa not only gives evidence of ionic bonding between the Y-Cl and Y-C atoms but features weak ELF values in the centers of the Y4 tetrahedra (Fig. 4b–d), forming bridges connecting the C atoms (see the highlighted red dashed lines in Figs. 4b, d). One can speculate from the ELF values that these ELF bridges are caused by the hybridization of the Y-d orbitals (for ELF < 0.5, the metal bonding is undoubtedly more pronounced37). To confirm this conclusion, additional DFT calculations were performed with the C atoms removed, resulting in a stable Y2Cl electride with a more localized ELF attractor at the center of the Y4 tetrahedra and anionic electrons localized at the centers of Y6 octahedra (Supplementary Fig. 11). The introduction of C atoms causes a charge loss in the Y4 tetrahedra and a charge gain in the Y6 octahedra (Supplementary Fig. 11g) resulting in the weak ELF bridges in Fig. 4b. The PDOS of Y-d orbitals and the partial charge density map further confirmed the Y-d orbital overlapping in the Y4 tetrahedra of Y2ClC (Supplementary Fig. 11f). Detailed information and further discussion of the electronic properties of Y2ClC and Dy2ClC can be found in Supplementary Discussion, Supplementary Figs. 11–13 and Supplementary Table 9.
To summarize, the chemical reactions between NaCl and Y, Dy, and Re at ~40 GPa and KCl and FeO at ~160 GPa, observed in the present work under HP, were unexpected. They led to the synthesis of hitherto unknown chlorides, Y2Cl and DyCl, and chloride carbides, Y2ClC and Dy2ClC. Although these results limit the application of alkali halides as thermal insulators and pressure media in LHDACs, as reactants, they provide a surprisingly simple route for the preparation of halogen-containing compounds.
Methods
Sample preparation
One stack of halide (NaCl or KCl) thin (3–5 µm) plate was first loaded on one of the diamond anvils, with a culet diameter of 250 µm (for DAC 1–4) or 120 µm (for DAC 5; Supplementary Table 1). A piece of pure flake of metal (Y/Dy/Re/Ag) or FeO of typically ~5 × 5 × 5 µm3 in size was positioned on the halide layer. Then we placed another stack of halide (NaCl or KCl) thin (3–5 µm) plate on the other diamond anvil so that the samples were loaded as sandwiches. Rhenium was used as the gasket material. NaCl and KCl powders were dried on a heating table at 220 °C for 48 h before loading to avoid any presence of water. The in situ pressure was measured using the first-order Raman mode of the stressed diamond anvils38. Double-sided sample laser-heating was performed at our home laboratory at the Bayerisches Geoinstitut39. Detailed information of pressure and the heating temperature can be found in Supplementary Table 1.
X-ray diffraction
Synchrotron X-ray diffraction measurements of the compressed samples were performed at ID15 (λ = 0.41015 Å, beam size ~5.0 × 5.0 μm2) and ID27 (λ = 0.3738 Å, beam size ~2.0 × 2.0 μm2) of the EBS-ESRF. In order to determine the sample position for single-crystal X-ray diffraction data acquisition, a full X-ray diffraction mapping of the pressure chamber was performed. The sample positions displaying the greatest number of single-crystal reflections belonging to the phases of interest were chosen, and step-scans of 0.5° from −36° to +36° ω were performed. The CrysAlisPro software40 was utilized for the single-crystal data analysis. To calibrate the instrumental model in the CrysAlisPro software, i.e. the sample-to-detector distance, detector’s origin, offsets of the goniometer angles, and rotation of both the X-ray beam and detector around the instrument axis, we used a single crystal of orthoenstatite [(Mg1.93Fe0.06)(Si1.93,Al0.06)O6, Pbca space group, a = 8.8117(2) Å, b = 5.1832(10) Å, and c = 18.2391(3) Å]. The DAFi program17 was used for the search of reflections’ groups belonging to individual single-crystal domains. The crystal structures were then solved and refined using the OLEX241 and JANA2006 software42. The crystallite sizes were estimated from X-ray maps. The crystallographic information is available in Supplementary Tables 2–6.
Density functional theory calculations
First-principles calculations were performed using the framework of density functional theory (DFT) as implemented in the Vienna Ab initio Simulation Package (VASP)43. The Projector-Augmented-Wave (PAW) method44,45 was used to expand the electronic wave function in plane waves. The Generalized Gradient Approximation (GGA) functional was used for calculating the exchange-correlation energies, as proposed by Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof (PBE)46. The PAW potentials with following valence configurations of 4s4p5s4d for Y, 4f6s for Dy, 3p4s3d for Fe, 3s3p for Cl, and 2s2p for C were used. The plane-wave kinetic energy cutoff was set to 600 eV. The crystal structure, ELF, and charge density maps visualization were made with the VESTA software47. The finite displacement method, as implemented in PHONOPY33, was used to calculate phonon frequencies and phonon band structures.
Data availability
All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article (and its Supplementary information files). The X-ray crystallographic coordinates for structures reported in this article have been deposited at the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC), under deposition number CSD-2184739, CSD 2184740, CSD 2184741 and 2184742. These data can be obtained free of charge from The Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre via www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif.
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Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) for provision of beamtime at the ID15b and ID27 beamlines. Y.Y. acknowledges the financial support provided by the China Scholarship Council (CSC) during her visit to the University of Bayreuth. N.D. and L.D. thank the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Germany (BMBF, grant no. 05K19WC1) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; projects DU 954–11/1, DU 393–9/2, DU 393–13/1) for financial support. N.D. also thanks the Swedish Government Strategic Research Area in Materials Science on Functional Materials at Linköping University (Faculty Grant SFO-Mat-LiU No. 2009 00971). M.B. acknowledges the support of Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG Emmy-Noether project BY112/2-1). D.L. thanks the UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship (MR/V025724/1) for financial support. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.
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L.D., N.D., and Y.Y. designed the study. L.D. and N.D. supervised the research. Y.Y., F.I.A., E.B., D.L., An.A., M.B., L.D., M.H., G.G. conducted the experiments. F.I.A. conducted experiments with dysprosium and processed the data. Y.Y., F.I.A., E.B., and L.D. analyzed all X-ray diffraction data. Theoretical calculations were performed by Y.Y and Al.A. Y.Y., L.D., and N.D. wrote the paper with contributions from all authors. L.D., N.D., Z.J., Al.A., D.L., An.A., and M.B. involved in the revision of the manuscript.
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Yin, Y., Akbar, F.I., Bykova, E. et al. Synthesis of rare-earth metal compounds through enhanced reactivity of alkali halides at high pressures. Commun Chem 5, 122 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-022-00736-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-022-00736-x
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