Equiatomic AEAuX (AE=Ca-Ba, X=Al-In) Intermetallics: A Systematic Study of their Electronic Structure and Spectroscopic Properties.
Christopher BenndorfFrank StegemannStefan SeidelLea SchubertManfred BartschHelmut ZachariasBernhard MausolfFrank HaarmannHellmut EckertRainer PöttgenOliver JankaPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2017)
The three intermetallic compounds SrAuGa, BaAuAl and BaAuGa were synthesised from the elements in niobium ampoules. The Sr compound crystallises in the orthorhombic KHg2 -type structure (Imma, a=465.6(1), b=771.8(2), c=792.6(2) pm, wR2 =0.0740, 324 F2 values, 13 variables), whereas the Ba compounds were both found to crystallise in the cubic non-centrosymmetric LaIrSi-type structure (P21 3, BaAuAl: a=696.5(1) pm; wR2 =0.0427, 446 F2 values, 12 variables; BaAuGa: a=693.49(4) pm, wR2 =0.0717, 447 F2 values, 12 variables). The samples were investigated by powder X-ray diffraction and their structures refined on the basis of single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. The title compounds, along with references from the literature (CaAuAl, CaAuGa, CaAuIn, and SrAuIn), were characterised further by susceptibility measurements and 27 Al and 71 Ga solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Theoretical calculations of the density of states (DOS) and the NMR parameters were used for the interpretation of the spectroscopic data. The electron transfer from the alkaline-earth metals and the group 13 elements onto the gold atoms was investigated through X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), classifying these intermetallics as aurides.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- high resolution
- particulate matter
- electron microscopy
- air pollution
- dual energy
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- electron transfer
- molecular docking
- heavy metals
- electronic health record
- systematic review
- water soluble
- pet ct
- atomic force microscopy
- big data
- molecular dynamics simulations
- crystal structure
- molecular dynamics
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance imaging
- risk assessment
- density functional theory
- health risk assessment
- health risk
- climate change