4.1 Article

Phonon Dispersion Analysis as an Indispensable Tool for Predictions of Solid State Polymorphism and Dynamic Metastability: Case of Compressed Silane

Journal

ACTA PHYSICA POLONICA A
Volume 119, Issue 6, Pages 895-900

Publisher

POLISH ACAD SCIENCES INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.12693/APhysPolA.119.895

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education [37/6PR UE/2007/7]
  2. Foundation for Polish Science
  3. EU

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Diamond anvil cell experiments suggest that upon compression above 26.5 GPa silane (SiH(4)) forms apolymeric phase VI, whose crystal structure has not yet been solved. Here we present DFT calculations showing how phonon-guided optimization leads to a polymeric Fdd2 structure which is the lowest-enthalpy polymorph of SiH(4) above 26.8 GPa, and which most probably can be identified as the experimentally observed polymeric phase. The new algorithm of predicting the lowest-energy structures enables simultaneous inspection of the potential energy surface of a given system, calculation of its vibrational properties, and assessment of chances for obtaining a metastable ambient-pressure structure via decompression. Our calculations indicate that at room temperature the differences in the vibrational and entropy terms contributing to the Gibbs free energy of different polymorphs of silane are negligible in comparison with corresponding differences in the zero-point energy corrections, in contrast to earlier suggestions. We also show that the Fdd2 polymorph should be metastable upon decompression up to 5 GPa, which suggests the possibility of obtaining a polymeric ambient-pressure form of SiH4. Polymeric silane should exhibit facile thermal decomposition with evolution of molecular hydrogen and thus constitute an efficient (12.5 wt%) material for hydrogen storage.

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