4.8 Article

Six-fold coordinated carbon dioxide VI

Journal

NATURE MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 34-38

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nmat1800

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Under standard conditions, carbon dioxide ( CO2) is a simple molecular gas and an important atmospheric constituent, whereas silicon dioxide ( SiO2) is a covalent solid, and one of the fundamental minerals of the planet. The remarkable dissimilarity between these two group IV oxides is diminished at higher pressures and temperatures as CO2 transforms to a series of solid phases, from simple molecular to a fully covalent extended-solid V, structurally analogous to SiO2 tridymite. Here, we present the discovery of an extended-solid phase of CO2: a sixfold coordinated stishovite- like phase VI, obtained by isothermal compression of associated CO2-II ( refs 1,2) above 50 GPa at 530-650 K. Together with the previously reported CO2-V ( refs 3-5) and a-carbonia(6), this extended phase indicates a fundamental similarity between CO2 ( a prototypical molecular solid) and SiO2 ( one of Earth's fundamental building blocks). We present a phase diagram with a limited stability domain for molecular CO2-I, and suggest that the conversion to extended-network solids above 40 50 GPa occurs via intermediate phases II ( refs 1,2), III ( refs 7,8) and IV ( refs 9,10). The crystal structure of phase VI suggests strong disorder along the c axis in stishovite- like P4(2)/mnm, with carbon atoms manifesting an average six-fold coordination within the framework of sp(3) hybridization.

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