Rapid shifts in the energy, technological, and environmental demands of materials science call for focused and efficient expansion of the library of functional inorganic compounds. To achieve the requisite efficiency, we need a materials discovery and optimization paradigm that can rapidly reveal all possible compounds for a given reaction and composition space. Here we provide such a paradigm via in situ X-ray diffraction measurements spanning solid, liquid flux, and recrystallization processes. We identify four new ternary sulfides from reactive salt fluxes in a matter of hours, simultaneously revealing routes for ex situ synthesis and crystal growth. Changing the flux chemistry, here accomplished by increasing sulfur content, permits comparison of the allowable crystalline building blocks in each reaction space. The speed and structural information inherent to this method of in situ synthesis provide an experimental complement to computational efforts to predict new compounds and uncover routes to targeted materials by design.D iscovering new materials is a crucial step to address largescale problems of energy conversion, storage, and transmission and other technological needs whether seeking bulk phases or thin films. Dense inorganic materials are desired for their tunable transport, magnetism, optical absorption, and stability, but their existence in general cannot be predicted with the near certainty of that of metastable organic and organometallic compounds. Whereas the desire to efficiently locate and assemble inorganic materials is great, it is hindered by traditional solid-state synthetic methods-at high temperatures often only the energy-minimum thermodynamic product is obtained. To strive toward an arena where metastable compounds can be discovered rapidly and made systematically, here we conduct reactions within liquid fluxes and use in situ monitoring to capture signatures of new phases, even when they quickly dissolve in the melt.Convective liquid fluxes (salts, metals, or oxides) can serve as reaction media that aid diffusion and enable rapid formation of compounds at temperatures far below their melting points (1-6). The flux can be nonreactive or reactive; in the latter case the flux itself becomes incorporated into the product (7,8). This wellestablished approach has demonstrated the prolific discovery of novel inorganic materials grown out of low-melting fluxes, from oxides and other chalcogenides (9-12), to pnictides (13,14), to intermetallics (15), many of which cannot be attained by direct combinations of the elements. Despite the variety of metastable phases formed in these reactions, the classical approach is to predetermine a given set of reaction conditions (e.g., time, temperature, and heating and cooling rates) and wait for completion to isolate and identify the formed compounds. It is not possible to observe how the reaction system itself has arrived at the isolated compound, whether the crystalline material formed on heating, on cooling, or on soaking at the given high temperature,...
The lack of an in-depth understanding of solution-phase speciation and its relationship to solid-state phase formation is a grand challenge in synthesis science. It has severely limited the ability of inorganic chemists to predict or rationalize the formation of compounds from solutions. The need to investigate mechanisms that underlie self-assembly has motivated this study of aqueous Zr-sulfate chemistry as a model system, with the goal of understanding the structures of oligomeric clusters present in solution. We used high-energy X-ray scattering (HEXS) data to quantify Zr correlations in a series of solutions as a function of sulfate concentration. The pair distribution function (PDF) from the sulfate-free sample reveals that the average oligomeric Zr moiety is larger than the tetrameric building unit, [Zr4(OH)8(H2O)16](8+), generally understood to dominate its solution speciation. At sulfate concentrations greater than 1 m (molal), bidentate sulfate is observed, a coordination not seen in Zr(SO4)2·4H2O (2), which forms upon evaporation. Also seen in solution are correlations consistent with sulfate-bridged Zr dimers and the higher-order oligomers seen in 2. At intermediate sulfate concentrations there are correlations consistent with large Zr hydroxo-/oxo-bridged clusters. Crystals of [Zr18(OH)26O20(H2O)23.2(SO4)12.7]Cl0.6·nH2O (3) precipitate from these solutions. The Raman spectrum of 3 has a peak at 1017 cm(-1) that can be used as a signature for its presence in solution. Raman studies on deuterated solutions point to the important role of sulfate in the crystallization process. These solution results emphasize the presence of well-defined prenucleation correlations on length scales of <1 nm, often considered to be within the structurally amorphous regime.
Single crystals of Np2Se5 have been prepared through the reactions of Np and Se at 1223 K in an Sb2Se3 flux. The structure of Np2Se5, which has been characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods, crystallizes in the tetragonal space group P42/nmc. The crystallographic unit cell includes one unique Np and two Se positions. Se(1) atoms form one-dimensional infinite chains along the a and b axes with alternating intermediate Se-Se distances of 2.6489 (8) and 2.7999 (8) Å, whereas Se(2) is a discrete Se(2-) anion. Each Np is coordinated to 10 Se atoms and every NpSe10 polyhedron shares faces, edges, or vertices with 14 other identical metal polyhedra to form a complex three-dimensional structure. Np LIII-edge X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (XANES) measurements show a clear shift in edge position to higher energies for Np2Se5 compared to Np3Se5 (Np(3+)2Np(4+)Se(2-)5). Magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate that Np2Se5 undergoes a ferromagnetic-type ordering below 18(1) K. Above the transition temperature, Np2Se5 behaves as a paramagnet with an effective moment of 1.98(5) μB/Np, given by a best fit of susceptibilities to a modified Curie-Weiss law over the temperature range 50-320 K.
A new binary compound, NpSe2, possesses metal–chalcogen and chalcogen–chalcogen interactions different from those reported for other metal dichalcogenides. Its structure is incommensurately modulated and features linear Se chains and valence‐ambiguous Np cations.
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