Abstract

The exploratory synthesis of gold-based polar intermetallic phases has revealed many new compounds with unprecedented crystal structures, unique bonding arrangements, and interesting electronic features. Here, we further understand the complexity of gold's crystal chemistry by studying the Na-Au-Cd ternary composition space. A nearly continuous structure transformation is observed between the seemingly simple binary NaAu2-NaCd2 phases, yielding three new intermetallic compounds with the compositions Na(Au0.89(5)Cd0.11(5))2, Na(Au0.51(4)Cd0.49(4))2, and Na8Au3.53(1)Cd13.47(1). Two compounds adopt different Laves phases, while the third crystallizes in a complex decagonal quasicrystal approximant. All three compounds are related through Friauf-Laves polyhedral building units with the gold/cadmium ratio found to control the transition among the unique crystal structures. Electronic structure calculations subsequently revealed the metallic nature of all three compounds with a combination of polar covalent Na-(Au/Cd) interactions and covalent (Au/Cd)-(Au/Cd) bonding interactions stabilizing each structure. These results highlight the crystal and electronic structure relationship among Laves phases and quasicrystal approximants enabled by the unique chemistry of gold.

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