Back to Search
Start Over
Polymeric forms of carbon in dense lithium carbide
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- The immense interest in carbon nanomaterials continues to stimulate intense research activities aimed to realize carbon nanowires, since linear chains of carbon atoms are expected to display novel and technologically relevant optical, electrical and mechanical properties. Although various allotropes of carbon (e.g., diamond, nanotubes, graphene, etc.) are among the best known materials, it remains challenging to stabilize carbon in the one-dimensional form because of the difficulty to suitably saturate the dangling bonds of carbon. Here, we show through first-principles calculations that ordered polymeric carbon chains can be stabilized in solid Li$_2$C$_2$ under moderate pressure. This pressure-induced phase (above 5 GPa) consists of parallel arrays of twofold zigzag carbon chains embedded in lithium cages, which display a metallic character due to the formation of partially occupied carbon lone-pair states in \emph{sp}$^2$-like hybrids. It is found that this phase remains the most favorable one in a wide range of pressure. At extreme pressure (larger the 215 GPa) a structural and electronic phase transition towards an insulating single-bonded threefold-coordinated carbon network is predicted.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures
- Subjects :
- Materials science
Polymers
Molecular Conformation
chemistry.chemical_element
FOS: Physical sciences
engineering.material
Lithium
law.invention
chemistry.chemical_compound
law
Phase (matter)
Pressure
Nanotechnology
General Materials Science
Condensed Matter - Materials Science
Graphene
Nanotubes, Carbon
Physics
Dangling bond
Diamond
Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)
Condensed Matter Physics
Allotropes of carbon
Carbon
chemistry
Chemical physics
engineering
Graphite
Electronics
Crystallization
DFT, carbon
Lithium carbide
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c1ee685d737fefa31bb26aa78cf54e98