60 research outputs found
Breaking the H2 chemical bond in a crystalline environment
Through density functional theory and molecular dynamics calculations, we
have analysed various metal polyhydrides to understand whether hydrogen is
present in its molecular or atomic form - tetrahydrides of Ba,Sr,Ra, Cs and La;
BaH and BaH.
We show that, in experimentally reported binary barium hydrides (BaH),
molecular H and atomic H can coexist with the metallic cations.
In this thorough study of differences between BaH, higher barium
hydrides, and other binary tetrahydrides we find the number of atomic hydrogens
is equal to the formal charge of the cations. The remaining hydrogen forms
molecules in proportions yielding, e.g. BaH(H, at pressures as high
as 200 GPa. At room temperature these are highly dynamic structures with the
hydrogens switching between H and H while retaining the 2:x ratio.
We find some qualitative differences between our static DFT calculations and
previously reported structural and spectroscopic experimental results. Two
factors allow us to resolve such discrepancies: Firstly, in static relaxation
H must be regarded as a non-spherical object, which breaks symmetry in a
way invisible to X-rays; Secondly the required number of molecules may be
incompatible with the experimental space group (e.g. ). In
molecular dynamics, bond-breaking transitions between various structural
symmetry configurations happen on a picosecond timescale via an H
intermediate. Rebonding is slow enough to allow a spectroscopic signal but
frequent enough to average out over the lengthscale involved in diffraction
Localisation effects on the Vibron Shifts in Helium-Hydrogen Mixtures
The vibrational frequency of hydrogen molecules has been observed to increase
strongly with He concentration in helium hydrogen fluid mixtures. This has been
associated with He-H interactions, either directly through chemical bonding, or
indirectly through increased local pressure. Here, we demonstrate that the
increase in the Raman frequency of the hydrogen molecule vibron is due to the
number of H molecules participating in the mode. There is no chemical
bonding between He and H, helium acts only to separate the molecules. The
variety of possible environments for H gives rise to many Raman active
modes, which causes broadening the vibron band. As the Raman active modes tend
to be the lower frequency vibrons, these effects work together to produce the
majority of the shift seen in experiment. We used Density Functional Theory
(DFT) methods in both solid and fluid phases to demonstrate this effect. DFT
also reveals that the pressure in these H-He mixture is primarily due to
quantum nuclear effects, again the weak chemical bonding makes it a secondary
effect
Morphological changes in carbon nanohorns under stress: a combined Raman spectroscopy and TEM study
In this work, we present the first study of highly compressed carbon nanohorns (CNHs).</p
High Pressure Insertion of Dense H2 into a Model Zeolite
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