4.7 Article

A fresh look at dense hydrogen under pressure. III. Two competing effects and the resulting intra-molecular H-H separation in solid hydrogen under pressure

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 136, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/1.3679749

Keywords

high-pressure effects; hydrogen; molecular electronic states; tight-binding calculations; wave functions

Funding

  1. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  2. Division Of Materials Research [907425] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A preliminary discussion of the general problem of localization of wave functions, and the way it is approached in theoretical condensed matter physics (Wannier functions) and theoretical chemistry (localized or fragment orbitals) is followed by an application of the ideas of Paper II in this series to the structures of hydrogen as they evolve under increasing pressure. The idea that emerges is that of simultaneously operative physical (reduction of available space by an increasingly stiff wall of neigh-boring molecules) and chemical (depopulation of the sigma(g) bonding molecular orbital of H-2, and population of the antibonding sigma(u)*MO) factors. The two effects work in the same direction of reducing the intermolecular separation as the pressure increases, but compete, working in opposite directions, in their effect on the intramolecular (nearest neighbor, intra-pair) distance. We examine the population of sigma(g) and sigma u*MOs in our numerical laboratory, as well as the total electron transfer (small), and polarization (moderate, where allowed by symmetry) of the component H-2 molecules. From a molecular model of two interacting H-2 molecules we find a linear relationship between the electron transfer from sigma(g) to sigma(u)* of a hydrogen molecular fragment and the intramolecular H-H separation, and that, in turn, allows us to estimate the expected bond lengths in H-2 under pressure if the first effect (that of simple confinement) was absent. In essence, the intramolecular H-H separations under pressure are much shorter than they would be, were there no physical/confinement effect. We then use this knowledge to understand how the separate E and PV terms contribute to hydrogen phase changes with increasing pressure. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3679749]

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