A wide
range of polynitrogen species have attracted much attention
because of their potential applications as high-energy-density materials.
Until now, predicted polynitrogen was found to be negatively charged,
with charge transfer from introduced atoms to nitrogen in nitrogen-bearing
compounds. Using an evolutionary algorithm combined with first-principles
calculations, stoichiometries and structures in nitrogen–fluorine
compounds at pressures ranging from 0 to 200 GPa are investigated.
In addition to two fluorine-rich compounds NF3 and NF5, two other compounds, NF and N6F, emerge with
increasing pressure. N6F, as a nitrogen-rich compound,
will become stable at pressures greater than 180 GPa with a positively
charged nitrogen network. Above 120 GPa, the NF compound with polymeric
zigzag nitrogen chains is discovered, and it is quenchable to the
ambient conditions, acquiring the highest energy density of 5.38 kJ/g
among reported binary covalent nitrogen compounds. These newly predicted
N–F compounds are useful in understanding the chemistry of
polynitrogen.