Pressure-Stabilized Semiconducting Electrides in Alkaline-Earth-Metal Subnitrides.
Yunwei ZhangWeikang WuYanchao WangShengyuan A YangYanming MaPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
High pressure is able to modify profoundly the chemical bonding and generate new phase structures of materials with chemical and physical properties not accessible at ambient conditions. We here report an unprecedented phenomenon on the pressure-induced formation of semiconducting electrides via compression of layered alkaline-earth subnitrides Ca2N, Sr2N, and Ba2N that are conducting electrides with loosely confined electrons in the interlayer voids at ambient pressure. Our extensive first-principles swarm structure searches identified the high-pressure semiconducting electride phases of a tetragonal I4̅2d structure for Ca2N and a monoclinic Cc structure shared by Sr2N and Ba2N, both of which contain atomic-size cavities with paring electrons distributed within. These electride structures are validated by the excellent agreement between the simulated X-ray diffraction patterns and the experimental data available. We attribute the emergence of the semiconducting electride phases to the p-d hybridization on alkaline-earth-metal atoms under compression as well as the filling of the p-d hybridized band due to the interaction between Ca and N. Our work provides a unique example of pressure-induced metal-to-semiconductor transition in compound materials and reveals unambiguously the electron-confinement topology change between different types of electrides.
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