Journal article

Novel Class of Rhenium Borides Based on Hexagonal Boron Networks Interconnected by Short B2 Dumbbells



Publication Details
Authors:
Bykova, E.; Johansson, E.; Bykov, M.; Chariton, S.; Fei, H.; Ovsyannikov, S.; Aslandukova, A.; Gabel, S.; Holz, H.; Merle, B.; Alling, B.; Abrikosov, I.; Smith, J.; Prakapenka, V.; Katsura, T.; Dubrovinskaia, N.; Goncharov, A.; Dubrovinsky, L.

Publication year:
2022
Journal:
Chemistry of Materials
Pages range :
8138-8152
Volume number:
34
Issue number:
18
ISSN:
0897-4756
eISSN:
1520-5002
DOI-Link der Erstveröffentlichung:


Abstract
Transition metal borides are known due to their attractive mechanical, electronic, refractive, and other properties. A new class of rhenium borides was identified by synchrotron single-crystal X-ray diffraction experiments in laser-heated diamond anvil cells between 26 and 75 GPa. Recoverable to ambient conditions, compounds rhenium triboride (ReB3) and rhenium tetraboride (ReB4) consist of close-packed single layers of rhenium atoms alternating with boron networks built from puckered hexagonal layers, which link short bonded (∼1.7 Å) axially oriented B2 dumbbells. The short and incompressible Re-B and B-B bonds oriented along the hexagonal c-axis contribute to low axial compressibility comparable with the linear compressibility of diamond. Sub-millimeter samples of ReB3 and ReB4 were synthesized in a large-volume press at pressures as low as 33 GPa and used for material characterization. Crystals of both compounds are metallic and hard (Vickers hardness, HV = 34(3) GPa). Geometrical, crystal-chemical, and theoretical analysis considerations suggest that potential ReB x compounds with x > 4 can be based on the same principle of structural organization as in ReB3 and ReB4 and possess similar mechanical and electronic properties.


Authors/Editors

Last updated on 2024-06-11 at 08:37