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High-pressure structural behavior of large-void CoSn-type intermetallics: Experiments and first-principles calculations

Mikhaylushkin, A S ; Sato, Toyoto ; Carlson, Stefan LU ; Simak, Sergei I and Haeussermann, Ulrich (2008) In Physical Review B (Condensed Matter and Materials Physics) 77(1). p.8-014102
Abstract
The high-pressure structural behavior of the binary intermetallic compounds CoSn, FeSn, and NiIn with the peculiar void containing CoSn (B35)-type structure has been studied by means of room-temperature diamond anvil cell and high-temperature multianvil experiments, as well as by first-principles calculations. All three compounds remain structurally stable at pressures up to at least 25 GPa, whereas first-principles calculations predict high-pressure structural changes below 20 GPa. A plausible explanation for the discrepancy is that at room temperature, a sizable activation barrier inhibits kinetically the transformation into more close-packed polymorphs. It is supported by our experiments at temperatures around 1000 degrees C and a... (More)
The high-pressure structural behavior of the binary intermetallic compounds CoSn, FeSn, and NiIn with the peculiar void containing CoSn (B35)-type structure has been studied by means of room-temperature diamond anvil cell and high-temperature multianvil experiments, as well as by first-principles calculations. All three compounds remain structurally stable at pressures up to at least 25 GPa, whereas first-principles calculations predict high-pressure structural changes below 20 GPa. A plausible explanation for the discrepancy is that at room temperature, a sizable activation barrier inhibits kinetically the transformation into more close-packed polymorphs. It is supported by our experiments at temperatures around 1000 degrees C and a pressure of 10 GPa. At these conditions, NiIn transforms into the temperature-quenchable stoichiometric CsCl-type high-pressure phase, which has been predicted in our first-principles calculations. However, CoSn and FeSn decompose into a mixture of compounds richer and poorer in tin, respectively. Nevertheless, it might be possible that lower temperatures and higher pressures may afford theoretically predicted polymorphs. In particular, a phase transformation to the FeSi-type structure predicted for CoSn is of interest as materials with the FeSi-type structure are known for unusual thermal and transport properties. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Physical Review B (Condensed Matter and Materials Physics)
volume
77
issue
1
pages
8 - 014102
publisher
American Physical Society
external identifiers
  • wos:000252862200018
  • scopus:38049161460
ISSN
1098-0121
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevB.77.014102
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
22172e6f-4296-48d0-bd82-31a4a4bfff21 (old id 1198531)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:53:15
date last changed
2022-03-29 23:20:23
@article{22172e6f-4296-48d0-bd82-31a4a4bfff21,
  abstract     = {{The high-pressure structural behavior of the binary intermetallic compounds CoSn, FeSn, and NiIn with the peculiar void containing CoSn (B35)-type structure has been studied by means of room-temperature diamond anvil cell and high-temperature multianvil experiments, as well as by first-principles calculations. All three compounds remain structurally stable at pressures up to at least 25 GPa, whereas first-principles calculations predict high-pressure structural changes below 20 GPa. A plausible explanation for the discrepancy is that at room temperature, a sizable activation barrier inhibits kinetically the transformation into more close-packed polymorphs. It is supported by our experiments at temperatures around 1000 degrees C and a pressure of 10 GPa. At these conditions, NiIn transforms into the temperature-quenchable stoichiometric CsCl-type high-pressure phase, which has been predicted in our first-principles calculations. However, CoSn and FeSn decompose into a mixture of compounds richer and poorer in tin, respectively. Nevertheless, it might be possible that lower temperatures and higher pressures may afford theoretically predicted polymorphs. In particular, a phase transformation to the FeSi-type structure predicted for CoSn is of interest as materials with the FeSi-type structure are known for unusual thermal and transport properties.}},
  author       = {{Mikhaylushkin, A S and Sato, Toyoto and Carlson, Stefan and Simak, Sergei I and Haeussermann, Ulrich}},
  issn         = {{1098-0121}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{8--014102}},
  publisher    = {{American Physical Society}},
  series       = {{Physical Review B (Condensed Matter and Materials Physics)}},
  title        = {{High-pressure structural behavior of large-void CoSn-type intermetallics: Experiments and first-principles calculations}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.77.014102}},
  doi          = {{10.1103/PhysRevB.77.014102}},
  volume       = {{77}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}