Layered transition metal compounds represent a major playground to explore unconventional electric or magnetic properties. In that framework, topochemical approaches that mostly preserve the topology of layered reactants have been intensively investigated to tune properties and/or design new materials. Topochemical reactions often involve the insertion or deinsertion of a chemical element accompanied by a change of oxidation state of the cations only. Conversely, cases where anions play the role of redox centers are very scarce. Here we show that the insertion of copper into two dimensional precursors containing chalcogen dimers (Q ) (Q=S, Se) can produce layered materials with extended (CuQ) sheets. The reality of this topochemical reaction is demonstrated here for different pristine materials, namely La O S , Ba F S , and LaSe . Therefore, this work opens up a new synthetic strategy to design layered transition metal compounds from precursors containing polyanionic redox centers.
BaSF was synthesised by a solid state reaction at high temperature and its crystal structure was determined thanks to X-ray diffraction on a single crystal. This transparent yellow fluorochalcogenide has an intergrowth structure built from the stacking of fluorite type layers and sulfur layers. In BaSF sulfur atoms form dimers with interatomic distances as short as 2.1074(10) Å. DFT calculations confirm that this compound is a band insulator with the Fermi level lying in between the antibonding π* and σ* molecular orbitals of the sulfur dimers. Reflectance measurements show that the optical band gap of BaSF is about 2.7 eV in good agreement with the value found from DFT calculations.
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