7 de febrero de 2023
Sánchez-Martín, J., Errandonea, D., Rahimi Mosafer, H. S., Paszkowicz, W., Minikayev, R., Turnbull, R., Berkowski, M., Ibáñez-Insa, J., Popescu, C., Fitch, A., Rodríguez-Hernández, P., & Muñoz, A. (2023). The pressure and temperature evolution of the Ca3V2O8 crystal structure using powder X-ray diffraction. CrystEngComm. https://doi.org/10.1039/D2CE01676A
Abstract
We present a comprehensive experimental study of the crystal structure of calcium vanadate (Ca3V2O8) under systematic temperature and pressure conditions. The temperature evolution (4-1173 K) of the Ca3V2O8 structural properties is investigated at ambient pressure. The pressure evolution (0-13.8 GPa) of the Ca3V2O8 structural properties is investigated at ambient temperature. Across all pressures and temperatures used in the present work, the Ca3V2O8 crystal structure was determined by Rietveld refinement of powder X-ray diffraction data. The experimental high-pressure data are also supported by density-functional theory calculations. According to the high-pressure results, Ca3V2O8 undergoes a pressure-induced structural phase transition at a pressure of 9.8(1) GPa from the ambient pressure trigonal structure (space group R3c) to a monoclinic structure (space group Cc). The experimentally determined bulk moduli of the trigonal and monoclinic phases are, respectively, B0 = 69(2) GPa and 105(12) GPa. The trigonal to monoclinic phase transition appears to be prompted by non-hydrostatic conditions. Whilst the trigonal and monoclincic space groups show a group/subgroup relationship, the discontinuity in the volume per formula unit observed at the transition indicates a first order phase transition. According to the high-temperature results, the trigonal Ca3V2O8 structure persists over the entire range of studied temperatures. The pressure-volume equation of state, axial compressibilities, Debye temperature (264(2) K), and thermal expansion coefficients are all determined for the trigonal Ca3V2O8 structure. © 2023 The Royal Society of Chemistry.