118 research outputs found
Structure and bonding of dense liquid oxygen from first principles simulations
Using first principles simulations we have investigated the structural and
bonding properties of dense fluid oxygen up to 180 GPa. We have found that band
gap closure occurs in the molecular liquid, with a "slow" transition from a
semi-conducting to a poor metallic state occurring over a wide pressure range.
At approximately 80 GPa, molecular dissociation is observed in the metallic
fluid. Spin fluctuations play a key role in determining the electronic
structure of the low pressure fluid, while they are suppressed at high
pressure.Comment: 4 figure
The growth of ZnO crystals from the melt
The peculiar properties of zinc oxide (ZnO) make this material interesting
for very different applications like light emitting diodes, lasers, and
piezoelectric transducers. Most of these applications are based on epitaxial
ZnO layers grown on suitable substrates, preferably bulk ZnO. Unfortunately the
thermochemical properties of ZnO make the growth of single crystals difficult:
the triple point 1975 deg C., 1.06 bar and the high oxygen fugacity at the
melting point p_O2 = 0.35 bar lead to the prevailing opinion that ZnO crystals
for technical applications can only be grown either by a hydrothermal method or
from "cold crucibles" of solid ZnO. Both methods are known to have significant
drawbacks. Our thermodynamic calculations and crystal growth experiments show,
that in contrast to widely accepted assumptions, ZnO can be molten in metallic
crucibles, if an atmosphere with "self adjusting" p_O2 is used. This new result
is believed to offer new perspectives for ZnO crystal growth by established
standard techniques like the Bridgman method.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for J. Crystal Growt
Crystal structure of solid Oxygen at high pressure and low temperature
Results of X-ray diffraction experiments on solid oxygen at low temperature
and at pressures up to 10 GPa are presented.A careful sample preparation and
annealing around 240 K allowed to obtain very good diffraction patterns in the
orthorhombic delta-phase. This phase is stable at low temperature, in contrast
to some recent data [Y. Akahama et al., Phys. Rev. B64, 054105 (2001)], and
transforms with decreasing pressure into a monoclinic phase, which is
identified as the low pressure alpha-phase. The discontinuous change of the
lattice parameters, and the observed metastability of the alpha-phase
increasing pressure suggest that the transition is of the first order.Comment: 4 pages with three figure
High Pressure Insulator-Metal Transition in Molecular Fluid Oxygen
We report the first experimental evidence for a metallic phase in fluid
molecular oxygen. Our electrical conductivity measurements of fluid oxygen
under dynamic quasi-isentropic compression show that a non-metal/metal
transition occurs at 3.4 fold compression, 4500 K and 1.2 Mbar. We discuss the
main features of the electrical conductivity dependence on density and
temperature and give an interpretation of the nature of the electrical
transport mechanisms in fluid oxygen at these extreme conditions.Comment: RevTeX, 4 figure
Low-Energy Linear Structures in Dense Oxygen: Implications for the -phase
Using density functional theory implemented within the generalized gradient
approximation, a new non-magnetic insulating ground state of solid oxygen is
proposed and found to be energetically favored at pressures corresponding to
the -phase. The newly-predicted ground state is composed of linear
herringbone-type chains of O molecules and has {\it Cmcm} symmetry (with an
alternative monoclinic cell). Importantly, this phase supports IR-active
zone-center phonons, and their computed frequencies are found to be in broad
agreement with recent infrared absorption experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Melting of tantalum at high pressure determined by angle dispersive x-ray diffraction in a double-sided laser-heated diamond-anvil cell
The high pressure and high temperature phase diagram of Ta has been studied
in a laser-heated diamond-anvil cell (DAC) using x-ray diffraction measurements
up to 52 GPa and 3800 K. The melting was observed at nine different pressures,
being the melting temperature in good agreement with previous laser-heated DAC
experiments, but in contradiction with several theoretical calculations and
previous piston-cylinder apparatus experiments. A small slope for the melting
curve of Ta is estimated (dTm/dP = 24 K/GPa at 1 bar) and a possible
explanation for this behaviour is given. Finally, a P-V-T equation of states is
obtained, being the temperature dependence of the thermal expansion coefficient
and the bulk modulus estimated.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, to appear in J.Phys.:Cond.Matte
The Metallic State in Neutral Radical Conductors: Dimensionality, Pressure and Multiple Orbital Effects
Pressure-induced changes in the solid-state structures and transport properties of three oxobenzene-bridged bisdithiazolyl radicals 2 (R = H, F, Ph) over the range 0â15 GPa are described. All three materials experience compression of their Ï-stacked architecture, be it (i) 1D ABABAB Ï-stack (R = Ph), (ii) quasi-1D slipped Ï-stack (R = H), or (iii) 2D brick-wall Ï-stack (R = F). While R = H undergoes two structural phase transitions, neither of R = F, Ph display any phase change. All three radicals order as spin-canted antiferromagnets, but spin-canted ordering is lost at pressures <1.5 GPa. At room temperature, their electrical conductivity increases rapidly with pressure, and the thermal activation energy for conduction Eact is eliminated at pressures ranging from âŒ3 GPa for R = F to âŒ12 GPa for R = Ph, heralding formation of a highly correlated (or bad) metallic state. For R = F, H the pressure-induced Mott insulator to metal conversion has been tracked by measurements of optical conductivity at ambient temperature and electrical resistivity at low temperature. For R = F compression to 6.2 GPa leads to a quasiquadratic temperature dependence of the resistivity over the range 5â300 K, consistent with formation of a 2D Fermi liquid state. DFT band structure calculations suggest that the ease of metallization of these radicals can be ascribed to their multiorbital character. Mixing and overlap of SOMO- and LUMO-based bands affords an increased kinetic energy stabilization of the metallic state relative to a single SOMO-based band system
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