4.1 Article

Design of High-Temperature Syntheses on the Example of the Heavy-Atom Cluster Compound Sn[PtBi6I12]

Journal

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/zaac.202200080

Keywords

bifunctional formalism; bismuth; cluster compounds; crystal growth; spin-orbit coupling

Funding

  1. Graduate Academy at Technische Universitat Dresden
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy through the Wurzburg-Dresden Cluster of Excellence on Complexity and Topology in Quantum Matter - ct.qmat [EXC 2147, 390858490]
  3. Projekt DEAL

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Through the combination of thermal and phase analyses of isothermal ex situ syntheses, a complex high-temperature synthesis protocol was established for the crystal growth of a target phase. This investigation also resulted in the discovery of a new subiodide with a complex structure and unique physical properties.
Investigations into potential topological materials yielded the new subiodide Sn[PtBi6I12]. The combination of thermal analyses with phase analyses of the products of isothermal ex situ syntheses allowed the establishment of a complex high-temperature synthesis protocol for the crystal growth of the target phase despite the lack of knowledge of the quaternary phase diagram. A special challenge was to prevent the formation of competing compounds of the solid solution series (Bi2xSn1-3x)[PtBi6I12] with x not equal 0. Sn[PtBi6I12] crystallizes, isostructural to Pb[PtBi6I12], in the rhombohedral space group R3? with lattice parameters a=1583.2(2) pm and c=1089.70(10) pm. The compound consists of cuboctahedral [PtBi6I12](2-) clusters and Sn2+ cations in an octahedral coordination between the trigonal faces of two cluster units, thereby concatenating them into infinite linear chains. The chains are connected via BiMIDLINE HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS I inter-cluster bridges, creating a high-entropy variant of the NaCl structure type. Sn[PtBi6I12] is a semiconductor with an experimental bandgap of 0.8(1) eV. Fully relativistic density functional theory calculations including an implementation of the bifunctional formalism for the exchange energy indicate a topologically trivial bandgap of 0.81 eV between bands that are dominated by contributions of bismuth and iodine.

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