Computationally Directed High-Pressure Discovery of Transition Metal-Bismuth Materials
ORAL
Abstract
Under applied pressures, fundamental elemental properties are renormalized, revealing compounds that challenge our understanding. To efficiently direct high-pressure synthetic efforts, it is useful to employ computational approaches that predict material stability. In this work, we used high throughput ab initio random structure searches to explore high-pressure transition metal (TM)–Bi phase space. We observed that the CuAl2 type structure is common, including for combinations of elements that are not miscible under ambient conditions. Turning to high-pressure experiments, we discovered the first Mo–Bi intermetallic material. Experimental structural elucidation of this material revealed how the CuAl2 structure type imposes strict electronic limits on its Bi members. This structure-property relationship determines the dynamic and magnetic properties of these materials, but in situ techniques are required to elucidate the high-pressure properties. Using the optical response of nitrogen vacancies embedded in our diamond anvils, we observed the predicted magnetic ordering. This result confirms the promise of this high-pressure approach for designing and understanding new functional materials.
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Publication: J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2021, 143, 1, 214–222.
Presenters
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Alison B Altman
Northwestern University
Authors
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Alison B Altman
Northwestern University
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Danna E Freedman
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
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James M Rondinelli
Northwestern University
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Nathan Koocher
Northwestern University
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Chris J Pickard
University of Cambridge
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Steven D Jacobsen
Northwestern University
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Satcher Hsieh
University of California, Berkeley
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Norman Y Yao
University of California, Berkeley