High-pressure and high-temperature modulation of one-dimensional infinite chain in SeO2

The structural evolution of lone-pair compounds under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions has been a subject of fundamental interest in revealing modulated polymorphs. As one of the archetypal lone-pair compounds, selenium dioxide (SeO2) has attracted much attention due to the pressure mod...

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Published inApplied physics letters Vol. 124; no. 14
Main Authors Lu, Wencheng, Liu, Siyu, Cai, Jinqun, Ning, Ping, Ma, Chuanheng, Liu, Guangtao, Wang, Hongbo, Guo, Qing, Zhou, Mi, Wang, Yanchao, Ma, Yanming
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Melville American Institute of Physics 01.04.2024
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Summary:The structural evolution of lone-pair compounds under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions has been a subject of fundamental interest in revealing modulated polymorphs. As one of the archetypal lone-pair compounds, selenium dioxide (SeO2) has attracted much attention due to the pressure modulation of its one-dimensional infinite W-shaped chain arrangement. Here, through swarm intelligence algorithm in conjunction with the first-principles simulation, we propose the existence of an orthorhombic Pnma-SeO2 structure, characterized by V-shaped chains interconnected via vertex-sharing SeO3 pyramids. These V-shaped chains demonstrate reduced compressibility along their chain direction compared to the W-shaped chains. Calculations indicate that Pnma-SeO2 is a semiconductor with a large indirect bandgap of 2.39 eV. Remarkably, we synthesized the predicted Pnma-SeO2 in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell at a pressure of 48.5 or 87 GPa as identified by in situ synchrotron x-ray diffraction data. Our findings lead to a significant extension of the phase diagram and transition path of SeO2 and provide key insights into understanding the pressure modulation in lone-pair compounds.
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content type line 14
ISSN:0003-6951
1077-3118
DOI:10.1063/5.0196686