In this work, we resolve a long-standing issue concerning the local structure of molten MgCl by employing a multimodal approach, including X-ray scattering and Raman spectroscopy, along with the theoretical modeling of the experimental spectra based on molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations utilizing several density functional theory (DFT) methods. We demonstrate the reliability of AIMD simulations in achieving excellent agreement between the experimental and simulated spectra for MgCl and 50 mol % MgCl + 50 mol % KCl, and ZnCl, thus allowing structural insights not directly available from experiment alone. A thorough computational analysis using five DFT methods provides a convergent view that octahedrally coordinated magnesium in pure MgCl upon melting preferentially coordinates with five chloride anions to form distorted square pyramidal polyhedra that are connected via corners and to a lesser degree via edges. This is contrasted with the results for ZnCl, which does not change its tetrahedral coordination on melting. Although the five-coordinate MgCl complex was not considered in the early literature, together with an increasing tendency to form a tetrahedrally coordinated complex with decreasing the MgCl content in the mixture with alkali metal chloride systems, current work reconciles the results of most previous seemingly contradictory experimental studies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c03786 | DOI Listing |
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