Serge Desgreniers
University of Ottawa
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Nature | 2006
L. F. Lundegaard; Gunnar Weck; Malcolm I. McMahon; Serge Desgreniers; Paul Loubeyre
Of the simple diatomic molecules, oxygen is the only one to carry a magnetic moment. This makes solid oxygen particularly interesting: it is considered a ‘spin-controlled’ crystal that displays unusual magnetic order. At very high pressures, solid oxygen changes from an insulating to a metallic state; at very low temperatures, it even transforms to a superconducting state. Structural investigations of solid oxygen began in the 1920s and at present, six distinct crystallographic phases are established unambiguously. Of these, the ɛ phase of solid oxygen is particularly intriguing: it exhibits a dark-red colour, very strong infrared absorption, and a magnetic collapse. It is also stable over a very large pressure domain and has been the subject of numerous X-ray diffraction, spectroscopic and theoretical studies. But although ɛ-oxygen has been shown to have a monoclinic C2/m symmetry and its infrared absorption behaviour attributed to the association of oxygen molecules into larger units, its exact structure remains unknown. Here we use single-crystal X-ray diffraction data collected between 13 and 18 GPa to determine the structure of ɛ-oxygen. We find that ɛ-oxygen is characterized by the association of four O2 molecules into a rhombohedral molecular unit, held together by what are probably weak chemical bonds. This structure is consistent with existing spectroscopic data, and further validated by the observation of a newly predicted Raman stretching mode.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Kristina Lekin; Stephen M. Winter; L. E. Downie; Xuezhao Bao; John S. Tse; Serge Desgreniers; Richard A. Secco; Paul A. Dube; Richard T. Oakley
The bisdithiazolyl radical 1a is dimorphic, existing in two distinct molecular and crystal modifications. The α-phase crystallizes in the tetragonal space group P4̅2(1)m and consists of π-stacked radicals, tightly clustered about 4̅ points and running parallel to c. The β-phase belongs to the monoclinic space group P2(1)/c and, at ambient temperature and pressure, is composed of π-stacked dimers in which the radicals are linked laterally by hypervalent four-center six-electron S···S-S···S σ-bonds. Variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility χ measurements confirm that α-1a behaves as a Curie-Weiss paramagnet; the low-temperature variations in χ can be modeled in terms of a 1D Heisenberg chain of weakly coupled AFM S = (1)/(2) centers. The dimeric phase β-1a is essentially diamagnetic up to 380 K. Above this temperature there is a sharp hysteretic (T↑= 380 K, T↓ = 375 K) increase in χ and χT. Powder X-ray diffraction analysis of β-1a at 393 K has established that the phase transition corresponds to a dimer-to-radical conversion in which the hypervalent S···S-S···S σ-bond is cleaved. Variable-temperature and -pressure conductivity measurements indicate that α-1a behaves as a Mott insulator, but the ambient-temperature conductivity σ(RT) increases from near 10(-7) S cm(-1) at 0.5 GPa to near 10(-4) S cm(-1) at 5 GPa. The value of σ(RT) for β-1a (near 10(-4) S cm(-1) at 0.5 GPa) initially decreases with pressure as the phase change takes place, but beyond 1.5 GPa this trend reverses, and σ(RT) increases in a manner which parallels the behavior of α-1a. These changes in conductivity of β-1a are interpreted in terms of a pressure-induced dimer-to-radical phase change. High-pressure, ambient-temperature powder diffraction analysis of β-1a confirms such a transition between 0.65 and 0.98 GPa and establishes that the structural change involves rupture of the dimer in a manner akin to that observed at high temperature and ambient pressure. The response of the S···S-S···S σ-bond in β-1a to heat and pressure is compared to that of related dimers possessing S···Se-Se···S σ-bonds.
Solid State Communications | 1995
Ken Lagarec; Serge Desgreniers
Abstract A single crystal of anatase TiO2 was studied by Raman spectroscopy at quasi-hydrostatic pressures up to 70 GPa. The crystallinity of the sample shortens the pressure range of the transition to an α-PbO2 structure to between 4.5 and 7 GPa. The resulting polycrystalline sample then transforms to a baddeleyite structure between 13 and 17 GPa. The Raman spectrum of this phase undergoes substantial changes in line intensities above 60 GPa, possibly due to a transition to a higher symmetry and coordination structure. Preliminary X-ray data at higher pressures also show the appearance of a new reflection, confirming the existence of a new phase.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Alicea A. Leitch; Kristina Lekin; Stephen M. Winter; L. E. Downie; H. Tsuruda; John S. Tse; Masaki Mito; Serge Desgreniers; Paul A. Dube; S. Zhang; Q. Liu; Changqing Jin; Yasuo Ohishi; Richard T. Oakley
The bromo-substituted bisdiselenazolyl radical 4b (R(1) = Et, R(2) = Br) is isostructural with the corresponding chloro-derivative 4a (R(1) = Et, R(2) = Cl), both belonging to the tetragonal space group P(4)2(1)m and consisting of slipped π-stack arrays of undimerized radicals. Variable temperature, ambient pressure conductivity measurements indicate a similar room temperature conductivity near 10(-4) S cm(-1) for the two compounds, but 4b displays a slightly higher thermal activation energy E(act) (0.23 eV) than 4a (0.19 eV). Like 4a, radical 4b behaves as a bulk ferromagnet with an ordering temperature of T(C) = 17.5 K. The coercive field H(c) (at 2 K) of 1600 Oe for 4b is, however, significantly greater than that observed for 4a (1370 Oe). High pressure (0-15 GPa) structural studies on both compounds have shown that compression reduces the degree of slippage of the π-stacks, which gives rise to changes in the magnetic and conductive properties of the radicals. Relatively mild loadings (<2 GPa) cause an increase in T(C) for both compounds, that of 4b reaching a maximum value of 24 K; further compression to 5 GPa leads to a decrease in T(C) and loss of magnetization. Variable temperature and pressure conductivity measurements indicate a decrease in E(act) with increasing pressure, with eventual conversion of both compounds from a Mott insulating state to one displaying weakly metallic behavior in the region of 7 GPa (for 4a) and 9 GPa (for 4b).
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Masaki Mito; Yuki Komorida; H. Tsuruda; John S. Tse; Serge Desgreniers; Yauso Ohishi; Alicea A. Leitch; Kristina Cvrkalj; Craig M. Robertson; Richard T. Oakley
Application of physical pressure to a ferromagnetic bisdiselenazolyl radical leads to a decrease in pi-stack slippage. Initially, this leads to an increase in the ferromagnetic ordering temperature T(C), which reaches a maximum of 21 K near 1 GPa. At higher pressures, as the pi-stacks become more nearly superimposed, the value of T(C) diminishes.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
John S. Tse; Alicea A. Leitch; Xueyang Yu; Xuezhao Bao; S. Zhang; Q. Liu; Changqing Jin; Richard A. Secco; Serge Desgreniers; Yasuo Ohishi; Richard T. Oakley
Variable pressure and temperature conductivity measurements on the bisthiaselenazolyl radical dimer [1a](2) have established the presence of a weakly metallic state over the pressure range 5-9 GPa. To explore the origin of this metallization we have examined the crystal and molecular structure of [1a](2) as a function of pressure. At ambient pressure the dimer consists of two radicals linked by a hypervalent 4-center 6-electron S...Se-Se...S sigma-bond into an essentially coplanar arrangement. The dimers are packed in cross-braced slipped pi-stack arrays running along the x-direction of the monoclinic (space group P2(1)/c) unit cell. Pressurization to 4 GPa induces little change in the molecular structure of [1a](2) or in the slipped pi-stack crystal architecture. Near 5 GPa, however, stress on the dimer leads to buckling of the two halves of the molecule and a contraction in the metrics of the S...Se-Se...S unit. These structural changes can be understood in terms of an electronic configurational switch from a 4-center 6-electron sigma-bonded dimer to a more conventional pi-bonded arrangement. At the same time the slipped pi-stack arrays undergo a concertina-like compression, and the crystal structure experiences highly anisotropic changes in cell dimensions. DFT calculations on the molecular electronic structure of the dimer indicate a marked decrease in the HOMO-LUMO gap as the dimer buckles. Related solid-state calculations indicate a rapid closure of the valence/conduction band gap in the same pressure region and the formation of a quasi-metallic state. Metallization of [1a](2) thus arises as much from intramolecular changes, which give rise to a collapse of the HOMO-LUMO gap and near coalescence of the valence and conduction bands, as from increased intermolecular interactions, which cause widening and overlap of the band edges.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Kristina Lekin; Hoa Phan; Stephen M. Winter; Joanne W. L. Wong; Alicea A. Leitch; Dominique Laniel; Wenjun Yong; Richard A. Secco; John S. Tse; Serge Desgreniers; Paul A. Dube; Michael Shatruk; Richard T. Oakley
The heterocyclic bisdithiazolyl radical 1b (R1 = Me, R2 = F) crystallizes in two phases. The α-phase, space group P2₁/n, contains two radicals in the asymmetric unit, both of which adopt slipped π-stack structures. The β-phase, space group P2₁/c, consists of cross-braced π-stacked arrays of dimers in which the radicals are linked laterally by hypervalent 4-center 6-electron S···S-S···S σ-bonds. Variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility measurements on α-1b indicate Curie-Weiss behavior (with Θ = -14.9 K), while the dimer phase β-1b is diamagnetic, showing no indication of thermal dissociation below 400 K. High-pressure crystallographic measurements indicate that the cross-braced π-stacked arrays of dimers undergo a wine-rack compression, but the dimer remains intact up to 8 GPa (at ambient temperature). The resistance of β-1b to dissociate under pressure, also observed in its conductivity versus pressure profile, is in marked contrast to the behavior of the related dimer β-1a (R1 = Et, R2 = F), which readily dissociates into a pair of radicals at 0.8 GPa. The different response of the two dimers to pressure has been rationalized in terms of differences in their linear compressibilities occasioned by changes in the degree of cross-bracing of the π-stacks. Dissociation of both dimers can be effected by irradiation with visible (λ = 650 nm) light; the transformation has been monitored by optical spectroscopy, magnetic susceptibility measurements, and single crystal X-ray diffraction. The photoinduced radical pairs persist up to temperatures of 150 K (β-1b) and 242 K (β-1a) before reverting to the dimer state. Variable-temperature optical measurements on β-1b and β-1a have afforded Arrhenius activation energies of 8.3 and 19.6 kcal mol(-1), respectively, for the radical-to-dimer reconversion. DFT and CAS-SCF calculations have been used to probe the ground and excited electronic state structures of the dimer and radical pair. The results support the interpretation that the ground-state interconversion of the dimer and radical forms of β-1a and β-1b is symmetry forbidden, while the photochemical transformation is symmetry allowed.
Physical Review B | 2014
F. F. Tafti; J. P. Clancy; M. Lapointe-Major; C. Collignon; Samuel Faucher; Jennifer Sears; A. Juneau-Fecteau; Nicolas Doiron-Leyraud; A. F. Wang; X. G. Luo; X. H. Chen; Serge Desgreniers; Young-June Kim; Louis Taillefer
We report a sudden reversal in the pressure dependence of Tc in the iron-based superconductor CsFe2As2, similar to that discovered recently in KFe2As2 [Tafti et al., Nat. Phys. 9, 349 (2013)]. As in KFe2As2, we observe no change in the Hall coefficient at the zero temperature limit, again ruling out a Lifshitz transition across the critical pressure Pc. We interpret the Tc reversal in the two materials as a phase transition from one pairing state to another, tuned by pressure, and investigate what parameters control this transition. Comparing samples of different residual resistivity, we find that a 6-fold increase in impurity scattering does not shift Pc. From a study of X-ray diffraction on KFe2As2 under pressure, we report the pressure dependence of lattice constants and As-Fe-As bond angle. The pressure dependence of these lattice parameters suggests that Pc should be significantly higher in CsFe2As2 than in KFe2As2, but we find on the contrary that Pc is lower in CsFe2As2. Resistivity measurements under pressure reveal a change of regime across Pc, suggesting a possible link between inelastic scattering and pairing symmetry.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2007
Jesse S. Smith; Serge Desgreniers; John S. Tse; Dennis D. Klug
The pressure-dependent structural and vibrational properties of barium hydride have been studied up to 22 GPa at room temperature by means of powder x-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, and first-principles calculations. At ambient conditions, BaH2 crystallizes in the cotunnite structure (Pnma). A reversible, first-order structural phase transition is observed at 1.6 GPa. The high-pressure phase can be indexed by a hexagonal unit cell with a proposed Ni2In structure (P63∕mmc), with the Ba and H atoms in special positions. The experimental volume compression of the high-pressure phase yields an isothermal bulk modulus B0=24(1) GPa (B0′ fixed at 4.13). This compares favorably with the results of the first-principles calculations, which reproduce the first-order nature of the transition. The relevance of these results is discussed in the contexts of metal hydrides in particular and ionic AX2(A=metal) compounds in general.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Di Tian; Stephen M. Winter; Aaron Mailman; Joanne W. L. Wong; Wenjun Yong; Hiroshi Yamaguchi; Yating Jia; John S. Tse; Serge Desgreniers; Richard A. Secco; S. R. Julian; Changqing Jin; Masaki Mito; Yasuo Ohishi; Richard T. Oakley
Pressure-induced changes in the solid-state structures and transport properties of three oxobenzene-bridged bisdithiazolyl radicals 2 (R = H, F, Ph) over the range 0-15 GPa are described. All three materials experience compression of their π-stacked architecture, be it (i) 1D ABABAB π-stack (R = Ph), (ii) quasi-1D slipped π-stack (R = H), or (iii) 2D brick-wall π-stack (R = F). While R = H undergoes two structural phase transitions, neither of R = F, Ph display any phase change. All three radicals order as spin-canted antiferromagnets, but spin-canted ordering is lost at pressures <1.5 GPa. At room temperature, their electrical conductivity increases rapidly with pressure, and the thermal activation energy for conduction Eact is eliminated at pressures ranging from ∼3 GPa for R = F to ∼12 GPa for R = Ph, heralding formation of a highly correlated (or bad) metallic state. For R = F, H the pressure-induced Mott insulator to metal conversion has been tracked by measurements of optical conductivity at ambient temperature and electrical resistivity at low temperature. For R = F compression to 6.2 GPa leads to a quasiquadratic temperature dependence of the resistivity over the range 5-300 K, consistent with formation of a 2D Fermi liquid state. DFT band structure calculations suggest that the ease of metallization of these radicals can be ascribed to their multiorbital character. Mixing and overlap of SOMO- and LUMO-based bands affords an increased kinetic energy stabilization of the metallic state relative to a single SOMO-based band system.