Studying the effect of high pressure (exceeding 10 kbar) on the structure of solids allows us to gain deeper insight into the mechanism governing crystal structure stability. Here, we report a study on the high-pressure behavior of zinc difluoride (ZnF)-an archetypical ionic compound which at ambient pressure adopts the rutile (TiO) structure. Previous investigations, limited to a pressure of 15 GPa, revealed that this compound undergoes two pressure-induced phase transitions, i.e., TiO → CaCl at 4.5 GPa and CaCl → HP-PdF at 10 GPa. Within this joint experimental-theoretical study, we extend the room-temperature phase diagram of ZnF up to 55 GPa. By means of Raman spectroscopy measurements we identify two new phase transitions, HP-PdF → HP1-AgF at 30 GPa and HP1-AgF → PbCl at 44 GPa. These results are confirmed by density functional theory calculations which indicate that in the HP1-AgF polymorph the coordination sphere of Zn undergoes drastic changes upon compression. Our results point to important differences in the high-pressure behavior of ZnF and MgF, despite the fact that both compounds contain cations of similar size. We also argue that the HP1-AgF structure, previously observed only for AgF, might be observed at large compression in other AB compounds.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b03553 | DOI Listing |
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