Elissaios Stavrou
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Elissaios Stavrou.
Science | 2013
Weiwei Zhang; Artem R. Oganov; Alexander F. Goncharov; Qiang Zhu; Salah Eddine Boulfelfel; Andriy O. Lyakhov; Elissaios Stavrou; Maddury Somayazulu; Vitali B. Prakapenka; Zuzana Konôpková
Salt to Squeeze Simple table salt, NaCl, is the only known stable phase of Na and Cl at ambient conditions. Previous attempts to understand its structure and chemical properties under pressure and at high temperatures revealed phase and bonding transitions, while keeping the balance of one Na to one Cl. Using crystal structure prediction algorithms, Zhang et al. (p. 1502; see the Perspective by Ibáñez Insa) show that other compounds—including Na3Cl, Na2Cl, Na3Cl2, NaCl3, and NaCl7 are as stable as NaCl across a range of pressures. Several phases in the Na-Cl system are stable at high pressures and temperatures. [Also see Perspective by Ibáñez Insa] Sodium chloride (NaCl), or rocksalt, is well characterized at ambient pressure. As a result of the large electronegativity difference between Na and Cl atoms, it has highly ionic chemical bonding (with 1:1 stoichiometry dictated by charge balance) and B1-type crystal structure. By combining theoretical predictions and diamond anvil cell experiments, we found that new materials with different stoichiometries emerge at high pressures. Compounds such as Na3Cl, Na2Cl, Na3Cl2, NaCl3, and NaCl7 are theoretically stable and have unusual bonding and electronic properties. To test this prediction, we synthesized cubic and orthorhombic NaCl3 and two-dimensional metallic tetragonal Na3Cl. These experiments establish that compounds violating chemical intuition can be thermodynamically stable even in simple systems at nonambient conditions.
Nature Chemistry | 2017
Xiao Dong; Artem R. Oganov; Alexander F. Goncharov; Elissaios Stavrou; Sergey S. Lobanov; Gabriele Saleh; Guang Rui Qian; Qiang Zhu; Carlo Gatti; Volker L. Deringer; Richard Dronskowski; Xiang-Feng Zhou; Vitali B. Prakapenka; Zuzana Konôpková; Ivan A. Popov; Alexander I. Boldyrev; Hui-Tian Wang
Helium is generally understood to be chemically inert and this is due to its extremely stable closed-shell electronic configuration, zero electron affinity and an unsurpassed ionization potential. It is not known to form thermodynamically stable compounds, except a few inclusion compounds. Here, using the ab initio evolutionary algorithm USPEX and subsequent high-pressure synthesis in a diamond anvil cell, we report the discovery of a thermodynamically stable compound of helium and sodium, Na2He, which has a fluorite-type structure and is stable at pressures >113 GPa. We show that the presence of He atoms causes strong electron localization and makes this material insulating. This phase is an electride, with electron pairs localized in interstices, forming eight-centre two-electron bonds within empty Na8 cubes. We also predict the existence of Na2HeO with a similar structure at pressures above 15 GPa.
Nature Communications | 2016
Viktor V. Struzhkin; Duck Young Kim; Elissaios Stavrou; Takaki Muramatsu; Ho-kwang Mao; Chris J. Pickard; R. J. Needs; Vitali B. Prakapenka; Alexander F. Goncharov
The only known compound of sodium and hydrogen is archetypal ionic NaH. Application of high pressure is known to promote states with higher atomic coordination, but extensive searches for polyhydrides with unusual stoichiometry have had only limited success in spite of several theoretical predictions. Here we report the first observation of the formation of polyhydrides of Na (NaH3 and NaH7) above 40 GPa and 2,000 K. We combine synchrotron X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell and theoretical random structure searching, which both agree on the stable structures and compositions. Our results support the formation of multicenter bonding in a material with unusual stoichiometry. These results are applicable to the design of new energetic solids and high-temperature superconductors based on hydrogen-rich materials.
Physical Review B | 2017
F. F. Tafti; M. S. Torikachvili; Ryan L. Stillwell; Bruce J. Baer; Elissaios Stavrou; S. T. Weir; Yogesh K. Vohra; Hung-Yu Yang; E. F. McDonnell; Satya Kushwaha; Quinn Gibson; R. J. Cava; Jason R. Jeffries
Extreme magnetoresistance (XMR) in topological semimetals is a recent discovery which attracts attention due to its robust appearance in a growing number of materials. To search for a relation between XMR and superconductivity, we study the effect of pressure on LaBi. By increasing pressure, we observe the disappearance of XMR followed by the appearance of superconductivity at
Scientific Reports | 2016
Weiwei Zhang; Artem R. Oganov; Qiang Zhu; Sergey S. Lobanov; Elissaios Stavrou; Alexander F. Goncharov
P\ensuremath{\approx}3.5
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Elissaios Stavrou; M. Riad Manaa; Joseph M. Zaug; I-Feng W. Kuo; Philip F. Pagoria; Bora Kalkan; Jonathan C. Crowhurst; Michael R. Armstrong
GPa. We find a region of coexistence between superconductivity and XMR in LaBi in contrast to other superconducting XMR materials. The suppression of XMR is correlated with increasing zero-field resistance instead of decreasing in-field resistance. At higher pressures,
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014
Doris Möncke; Sergey Sirotkin; Elissaios Stavrou; E. I. Kamitsos; Lothar Wondraczek
P\ensuremath{\approx}11
Scientific Reports | 2013
Elissaios Stavrou; Muhtar Ahart; Mohammad F. Mahmood; Alexander F. Goncharov
GPa, we find a structural transition from the face-centered cubic lattice to a primitive tetragonal lattice, in agreement with theoretical predictions. The relationship between extreme magnetoresistance, superconductivity, and structural transition in LaBi is discussed.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Alexander F. Goncharov; Nicholas Holtgrewe; Guang-Rui Qian; Chaohao Hu; Artem R. Oganov; Maddury Somayazulu; Elissaios Stavrou; Chris J. Pickard; Adam Berlie; Fei Yen; Mahmood Mahmood; Sergey S. Lobanov; Zuzana Konôpková; Vitali B. Prakapenka
K-Cl is a simple system displaying all four main types of bonding, as it contains (i) metallic potassium, (ii) elemental chlorine made of covalently bonded Cl2 molecules held together by van der Waals forces, and (iii) an archetypal ionic compound KCl. The charge balance rule, assigning classical charges of “+1” to K and “−1” to Cl, predicts that no compounds other than KCl are possible. However, our quantum-mechanical variable-composition evolutionary simulations predict an extremely complex phase diagram, with new thermodynamically stable compounds K3Cl, K2Cl, K3Cl2, K4Cl3, K5Cl4, K3Cl5, KCl3 and KCl7. Of particular interest are 2D-metallic homologs Kn+1Cln, the presence of positively charged Cl atoms in KCl7, and the predicted stability of KCl3 already at nearly ambient pressures at zero Kelvin. We have synthesized cubic -KCl3 at 40–70 GPa and trigonal -KCl3 at 20–40 GPa in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell (DAC) at temperature exceeding 2000 K from KCl and Cl2. These phases were identified using in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. Upon unloading to 10 GPa, -KCl3 transforms to a yet unknown structure before final decomposition to KCl and Cl2 at near-ambient conditions.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Elissaios Stavrou; Yansun Yao; Joseph M. Zaug; Sorin Bastea; Bora Kalkan; Zuzana Konôpková; Martin Kunz
Recent theoretical studies of 2,6-diamino-3,5-dinitropyrazine-1-oxide (C4H4N6O5 Lawrence Livermore Molecule No. 105, LLM-105) report unreacted high pressure equations of state that include several structural phase transitions, between 8 and 50 GPa, while one published experimental study reports equation of state (EOS) data up to a pressure of 6 GPa with no observed transition. Here we report the results of a synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction study and also ambient temperature isobaric-isothermal atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of LLM-105 up to 20 GPa. We find that the ambient pressure phase remains stable up to 20 GPa; there is no indication of a pressure induced phase transition. We do find a prominent decrease in b-axis compressibility starting at approximately 13 GPa and attribute the stiffening to a critical length where inter-sheet distance becomes similar to the intermolecular distance within individual sheets. The ambient temperature isothermal equation of state was determined through refinements of measured X-ray diffraction patterns. The pressure-volume data were fit using various EOS models to yield bulk moduli with corresponding pressure derivatives. We find very good agreement between the experimental and theoretically derived EOS.