510 research outputs found
Towards the theory of hardness of materials
Recent studies showed that hardness, a complex property, can be calculated
using very simple approaches or even analytical formulae. These form the basis
for evaluating controversial experimental results (as we illustrate for
TiO2-cotunnite) and enable a systematic search for novel hard materials, for
instance, using global optimization algorithms (as we show on the example of
SiO2 polymorphs)
Boron: a Hunt for Superhard Polymorphs
Boron is a unique element, being the only element, all known polymorphs of
which are superhard, and all of its crystal structures are distinct from any
other element. The electron-deficient bonding in boron explains its remarkable
sensitivity to even small concentrations of impurity atoms and allows boron to
form peculiar chemical compounds with very different elements. These
complications made the study of boron a great challenge, creating also a unique
and instructive chapter in the history of science. Strange though it may sound,
the discovery of boron in 1808 was ambiguous, with pure boron polymorphs
established only starting from the 1950s-1970s, and only in 2007 was the stable
phase at ambient conditions determined. The history of boron research from its
discovery to the latest discoveries pertaining to the phase diagram of this
element, the structure and stability of beta-boron, and establishment of a new
high-pressure polymorph, gamma-boron, is reviewed
How to quantify energy landscapes of solids
We explore whether the topology of energy landscapes in chemical systems
obeys any rules and what these rules are. To answer this and related questions
we use several tools: (i)Reduced energy surface and its density of states, (ii)
descriptor of structure called fingerprint function, which can be represented
as a one-dimensional function or a vector in abstract multidimensional space,
(iii) definition of a ''distance'' between two structures enabling
quantification of energy landscapes, (iv) definition of a degree of order of a
structure, and (v) definitions of the quasi-entropy quantifying structural
diversity. Our approach can be used for rationalizing large databases of
crystal structures and for tuning computational algorithms for structure
prediction. It enables quantitative and intuitive representations of energy
landscapes and reappraisal of some of the traditional chemical notions and
rules. Our analysis confirms the expectations that low-energy minima are
clustered in compact regions of configuration space ("funnels") and that
chemical systems tend to have very few funnels, sometimes only one. This
analysis can be applied to the physical properties of solids, opening new ways
of discovering structure-property relations. We quantitatively demonstrate that
crystals tend to adopt one of the few simplest structures consistent with their
chemistry, providing a thermodynamic justification of Pauling's fifth rule.Comment: Published in J. Chem. Phys. 130, 104504 (2009
The role of temperature and Coulomb correlation in stabilization of CsCl-phase in FeS under pressure
The iron-sulfur system is important for planetary interiors and is intensely
studied, particularly for better understanding of the cores of Mars and Earth.
Yet, there is a paradox about high-pressure stability of FeS: ab initio global
optimization (at DFT level) predicts a Pmmn phase (with a distorted rocksalt
structure) to be stable at pressures above ~120 GPa, which has not yet been
observed in the experiments that instead revealed a CsCl-type phase which,
according to density functional calculations, should not be stable. Using
quasiharmonic free energy calculations and the dynamical mean field theory, we
show that this apparent discrepancy is removed by proper account of electron
correlations and entropic effects.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Exotic behavior and crystal structures of calcium under pressure
Experimental studies established that calcium undergoes several
counterintuitive transitions under pressure: fcc \rightarrow bcc \rightarrow
simple cubic \rightarrow Ca-IV \rightarrow Ca-V, and becomes a good
superconductor in the simple cubic and higher-pressure phases. Here, using ab
initio evolutionary simulations, we explore the behavior of Ca under pressure
and find a number of new phases. Our structural sequence differs from the
traditional picture for Ca, but is similar to that for Sr. The {\beta}-tin
(I41/amd) structure, rather than simple cubic, is predicted to be the
theoretical ground state at 0 K and 33-71 GPa. This structure can be
represented as a large distortion of the simple cubic structure, just as the
higher-pressure phases stable between 71 and 134 GPa. The structure of Ca-V,
stable above 134 GPa, is a complex host-guest structure. According to our
calculations, the predicted phases are superconductors with Tc increasing under
pressure and reaching ~20 K at 120 GPa, in good agreement with experiment
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