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Synthetic control over polymorph formation in the d-band semiconductor system FeS2

Authors :
Wanli Yang
KeYuan Ma
Jorge Lago
Qingtian Li
Olivier Blacque
Fabian O. von Rohr
Robin Lefèvre
University of Zurich
von Rohr, Fabian O
Source :
Addi. Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación, instname, Chemical science, vol 12, iss 41
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry, 2021.

Abstract

Pyrite, also known as fool's gold is the thermodynamic stable polymorph of FeS$_2$. It is widely considered as a promising d-band semiconductor for various applications due to its intriguing physical properties. Marcasite is the other naturally occurring polymorph of FeS$_2$. Measurements on natural crystals have shown that it has similarly promising electronic, mechanical, and optical properties as pyrite. However, it has been only scarcely investigated so far, because the laboratory-based synthesis of phase-pure samples or high-quality marcasite single crystal has been a challenge until now. Here, we report the targeted phase formation via hydrothermal synthesis of marcasite and pyrite. The formation condition and phase purity of the FeS$_2$ polymorphs are systematically studied in the form of a comprehensive synthesis map. We, furthermore, report on a detailed analysis of marcasite single crystal growth by a space-separated hydrothermal synthesis. We observe that single phase product of marcasite forms only on the surface under the involvement of H$_2$S and sulphur vapor. The availability of high-quality crystals of marcasite allows us to measure the fundamental physical properties, including an allowed direct optical bandgap of 0.76 eV, temperature independent diamagnetism, an electronic transport gap of 0.11 eV, and a room-temperature carrier concentration of 4.14 $\times$ 10$^{18}$ cm$^{-3}$. X-ray absorption/emission spectroscopy are employed to measure the band gap of the two FeS$_2$ phases. We find marcasite has a band gap of 0.73 eV, while pyrite has a band gap of 0.87 eV. Our results indicate that marcasite -- that is now synthetically available in a straightforward fashion -- is as equally promising as pyrite as candidate for various semiconductor applications based on earth abundant elements.<br />Comment: Supporting Information available at publisher's page: https://www.rsc.org/suppdata/d1/sc/d1sc03026d/d1sc03026d1.pdf

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Addi. Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación, instname, Chemical science, vol 12, iss 41
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc5f8fcf2de1feccace234226d5edb81