Relativistic effects and pressure-induced phase transition in CsAu.
Júlia F B ManfroGiovani L RechJanete Eunice ZorziCláudio Antônio PerottoniPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
Cesium auride (CsAu) is an intriguing compound formed by two metals that, upon reacting, exhibits properties of an ionic salt. In this study, we employ computer simulations to explore the influence of relativistic effects on the structure and some physical properties of CsAu, as well as on a potential pressure-induced structural phase transition, the effect of high pressures on its electronic gap, and the possible transition to a conducting state. We have found that including relativistic effects reduces the lattice parameter of CsAu and brings its volumetric properties closer to the trend observed in alkali halides. It also enhances the charge transfer from cesium to gold, resulting in a difference of up to 0.15 e , at ambient pressure, between non-relativistic and fully relativistic calculations. Additionally, upon increasing pressure, in the absence of intervening structural phase transitions, the closing of CsAu's band gap is expected at approximately 31.5 GPa. The inclusion of relativistic effects stabilizes the CsAu Pm 3̄ m structure and shifts the transition pressure to a possible high-pressure P 4/ mmm phase from 2 GPa (non-relativistic calculation) to 14 GPa (fully-relativistic calculation). Both the Pm 3̄ m and P 4/ mmm structures become dynamically unstable around 15 GPa, thus suggesting that the tetragonal structure may be an intermediate state towards a truly stable high-pressure CsAu phase.