Fluorine-Driven Enhancement of Birefringence in the Fluorooxosulfate: A Deep Evaluation from a Joint Experimental and Computational Study.
Wenqi JinWenyao ZhangAbudukadi TudiLiying WangXin ZhouZhihua YangShilie PanPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2021)
Understanding and exploring the functional modules (FMs) consisting of local atomic groups can promote the development of the materials with functional performances. Oxygen-containing tetrahedral modules are popular in deep-ultraviolet (DUV) optical materials, but their weak optical anisotropy is adverse to birefringence. Here, the fluorooxosulfate group is proved as a new birefringence-enhanced FM for the first time. The birefringence of fluorooxosulfates can be 4.8-15.5 times that of sulfates with the same metal cations while maintaining a DUV band gap. The polarizing microscope measurement confirms the birefringence enhancement by using the millimeter crystals experimentally. The theoretical studies from micro and macro levels further reveal a novel universal strategy that the fluorine induced anisotropic electronic distribution in fluorooxo-tetrahedral group is responsible for the enhancement of birefringence. This study will guide the future discovery of DUV optical materials with enlarged birefringence.