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Vibrations and Phase Stability in Mixed Valence Antimony Oxide.

Duncan H MoseleyRinkle JunejaLuke L DaemenIlya SergueevRené SteinbrüggeOlaf LeupoldYongqiang ChengValentino R CooperLucas LindsayMichelle K KidderMichael E ManleyRaphaël P Hermann
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
α-Sb 2 O 4 (cervantite) and β-Sb 2 O 4 (clinocervantite) are mixed valence compounds with equal proportions of Sb III and Sb V as represented in the formula Sb III Sb V O 4 . Their structure and properties can be difficult to calculate owing to the Sb III lone-pair electrons. Here, we present a study of the lattice dynamics and vibrational properties using a combination of inelastic neutron scattering, Mössbauer spectroscopy, nuclear inelastic scattering, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. DFT calculations that account for lone-pair electrons match the experimental densities of phonon states. Mössbauer spectroscopy reveals the β phase to be significantly harder than the α phase. Calculations with O vacancies reveal the possibility for nonstoichiometric proportions of Sb III and Sb V in both phases. An open question is what drives the stability of the α phase over the β phase, as the latter shows pronounced kinetic stability and lower symmetry despite being in the high-temperature phase. Since the vibrational entropy difference is small, it is unlikely to stabilize the α phase. Our results suggest that the α phase is more stable only because the material is not fully stoichiometric.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • gene expression
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • high temperature
  • genome wide