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Chemistry, Structure, and Function of Lone Pairs in Extended Solids

Journal

ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
Volume 55, Issue 7, Pages 1004-1014

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00741

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Bates College
  2. National Science Foundation [DMR 1904980]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC-0012541]

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The lone pair, a known feature of molecular electronic structure, plays a significant role in the crystalline solid state, with impacts on various properties and functionalities. It affects ion transport, dipole formation, refractive index, thermal conductivity, and light generation. Recent studies have recognized its role in the electronic structure of topological quantum materials. Hidden lone pairs, characterized by local distortions, have become a growing area of research. This Account introduces the chemistry of lone pairs in extended crystalline solids, discussing their stereochemical activity, manifestation in structure, and tuning by the chemical environment.
CONSPECTUS: The lone pair has been a known feature of the electronic structure of molecules for over 100 years. Beginning with the pioneering work of Lewis and others that was later developed into useful guidelines for predicting molecular structure, lone pairs and their steric consequences are now taught at the very earliest stages of a chemistry education. In the crystalline solid state, lone pairs have perhaps had a less visible yet equally consequential role, with a significant impact on a range of properties and functionalities. Important properties associated with s2 electron-derived lone pairs include their role in creating conditions favorable for ion transport, in the formation and correlation of local dipoles and the resulting polar behavior leading to ferroics and multiferroics, in increasing the refractive index of glass, in reducing the thermal conductivity of thermoelectric materials, and in breaking local symmetry permitting second-harmonic light generation.. In recent years, the role of the lone pair in developing the electronic structure of some topological quantum materials has also been recognized. While structural distortions due to lone pairs have traditionally been characterized through their crystallography, recent advances in scattering and spectroscopy have revealed the presence of local lone pair-driven distortions that do not correlate over long length scales. The role of these crystallographically hidden lone pairs, their detection, and their impact on properties have become a growing body of work in the literature. Hidden lone pairs are an effective argument for considering a role for lone pairs that goes beyond their being objects that occupy space in the coordination polyhedra of cations. This Account introduces the chemistry of lone pairs in extended crystalline solids, including a discussion of when they are stereochemically active, how they manifest in the structure, and how their chemistry can be tuned by the chemical environment around them. Eventually, all of these factors work in unison to help develop and tune properties of interest. Certain specific examples of structure-property relationships in materials that are driven by lone pair behavior are described here, including the potential impact of lone pairs on the optical and electronic properties of hybrid halide perovskite compounds that are relevant to their photovoltaic applications. We highlight the role of lone pairs in the dielectric behavior of geometrically frustrated pyrochlores, the temperature-dependent optoelectronic behavior of halide perovskites, the polar phase transitions in lead-free ferroelectric perovskites, and the compositional insulator-to-metal transition in ruthenium pyrochlores. The theme underpinning this Account is that the lone pair can be considered to be a powerful design element for a broad range of material function.

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