No Arabic abstract
Pressure-induced transitions from ordered intermetallic phases to substitutional alloys to semi-ordered phases were studied in a series of bismuth tellurides. Using angle-dispersive x-ray diffraction, the compounds Bi4Te5, BiTe, and Bi2Te were observed to form alloys with the disordered body-centered cubic (bcc) crystal structure upon compression to above 14--19 GPa at room temperature. The BiTe and Bi2Te alloys and the previously discovered high-pressure alloys of Bi2Te3 and Bi4Te3 were all found to show atomic ordering after gentle annealing at very moderate temperatures of ~100{deg}C. Upon annealing, BiTe transforms from the bcc to the B2 (CsCl) crystal structure type, and the other phases adopt semi-disordered variants thereof, featuring substitutional disorder on one of the two crystallographic sites. The transition pressures and atomic volumes of the alloy phases show systematic variations across the Bi_mTe_n series including the end members Bi and Te. First-principles calculations were performed to characterize the electronic structure and chemical bonding properties of B2-type BiTe and to identify the driving forces of the ordering transition. The calculated Fermi surface of B2-type BiTe has an intricate structure and is predicted to undergo three topological changes between 20 and 60 GPa.
Although copper and bismuth do not form any compounds at ambient conditions, two intermetallics, CuBi and Cu$_{11}$Bi$_7$, were recently synthesized at high pressures. Here we report on the discovery of additional copper-bismuth phases at elevated pressures with high-densities from ab initio calculations. In particular, a Cu$_2$Bi compound is found to be thermodynamically stable at pressures above 59 GPa, crystallizing in the cubic Laves structure. In strong contrast to Cu$_{11}$Bi$_7$ and CuBi, cubic Cu$_2$Bi does not exhibit any voids or channels. Since the bismuth lone pairs in cubic Cu$_2$Bi are stereochemically inactive, the constituent elements can be closely packed and a high density of 10.52 g/cm$^{3}$ at 0 GPa is achieved. The moderate electron-phonon coupling of $lambda=0.68$ leads to a superconducting temperature of 2 K, which exceeds the values observed both in Cu$_{11}$Bi$_7$and CuBi, as well as in elemental Cu and Bi .
The synthesis of materials in high-pressure experiments has recently attracted increasing attention, especially since the discovery of record breaking superconducting temperatures in the sulfur-hydrogen and other hydrogen-rich systems. Commonly, the initial precursor in a high pressure experiment contains constituent elements that are known to form compounds at ambient conditions, however the discovery of high-pressure phases in systems immiscible under ambient conditions poses an additional materials design challenge. We performed an extensive multi component $ab,initio$ structural search in the immiscible Fe--Bi system at high pressure and report on the surprising discovery of two stable compounds at pressures above $approx36$ GPa, FeBi$_2$ and FeBi$_3$. According to our predictions, FeBi$_2$ is a metal at the border of magnetism with a conventional electron-phonon mediated superconducting transition temperature of $T_{rm c}=1.3$ K at 40 GPa. In analogy to other iron-based materials, FeBi$_2$ is possibly a non-conventional superconductor with a real $T_{rm c}$ significantly exceeding the values obtained within Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) theory.
A study of high pressure solid Te was carried out at room temperature using Raman spectroscopy and Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations. The analysis of the P-dependence of the experi- mental phonon spectrum reveals the occurrence of phase transitions at 4 GPa and 8 GPa confirming the high-pressure scenario recently proposed. The effects of the incommensurate lattice modulation on the vibrational properties of Te is discussed. DFT calculations agree with present and previous experimental data and show the metallization process at 4 GPa being due to the development of charge-bridges between atoms belonging to adjacent chains. A first-principles study of the stability of the 4 GPa phase is reported and discussed also in the light of the insurgence of lattice modulation.
In the search for MgB2-like phonon-mediated superconductors we have carried out a systematic density functional theory study of the Ca-B system, isoelectronic to Mg-B, at ambient and gigapascal pressures. A remarkable variety of candidate high-pressure ground states have been identified with an evolutionary crystal structure search, including a stable alkaline-earth monoboride oI8-CaB, a superconductor with an expected critical temperature (Tc) of 5.5 K. We have extended our previous study of CaB6 [Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 102501 (2012)] to nearby stoichiometries of CaB[6+x], finding that extra boron further stabilizes the proposed B24 units. Here an explanation is given for the transformation of cP7-CaB6 into the more complex oS56 and tI56 polymorphs at high pressure. The stability of the known metallic tP20 phase of CaB4 at ambient pressure is explained from a crystal structure and chemical bonding point of view. The tP20 structure is shown to destabilize at 19 GPa relative to a semiconducting MgB4-like structure due to chemical pressure from the metal ion. The hypothetical AlB2-type structure of CaB2, previously shown to have favorable superconducting features, is demonstrated here to be unstable at all pressures; two new metallic CaB2 polymorphs with unusual boron networks stabilize at elevated pressures above 8 GPa but are found to have very low critical temperatures (Tc ~1 K). The stability of all structures has been rationalized through comparison with alkaline-earth analogs, emphasizing the importance of the size of the metal ion for the stability of borides. Our study illustrates the inverse correlation between the thermodynamic stability and superconducting properties and the necessity to carefully examine both in the design of new synthesizable superconducting materials.
Two-dimensional (2D) chromium tellurides have attracted considerable research interest for their high Curie temperatures. Their magnetic properties have been found diverse in various experiments, the understanding of which however remains limited. In this work, we report that the magnetic ordering of ultrathin chromium tellurides is structure dependent and can be tuned by external strain. Based on first-principles calculations and Monte Carlo simulations, we show long-range stable magnetism with high and low Curie temperature, and short-range magnetism in 2D Cr5Te8, CrTe2, and Cr2Te3 layers, respectively. We further find that ferromagnetic-to-antiferromagnetic transition can be realized by 2% compressive strain for CrTe2 and 2% tensile strain for Cr2Te3, and their magnetic easy axis is tuned from out-of-plane to in-plane by the medium tensile and compressive strain. This strain dependent magnetic coupling is found to be related to Cr-Cr direct exchange and the change of magnetic anisotropy is understood by the atom and orbital resolved magnetic anisotropy energy and second order perturbation theory. Our results reveal the important roles of the structure and strain in determining the magnetic ordering in 2D chromium telluride, shedding light on understanding of the diverse magnetic properties observed in experiments.