Abstract
We employ periodic density functional theory calculations to compare the structural chemistry of silicon chalcogenides (silica, silicon sulfide) and anhydrous tetrahedral halides (beryllium fluoride, beryllium chloride). Despite the different formal oxidation states of the elements involved, the divalent halides are known experimentally to form crystal structures similar to known SiX2 frameworks; the rich polymorphic chemistry of SiO2 is however not matched by divalent halides, for which a very limited number of polymorphs are currently known. The calculated energy landscapes yield a quantitative match between the relative polymorphic stability in the SiO2/BeF2 pair, and a semiquantitative match for the SiS2/BeCl2 pair. The experimentally observed polymorphs are found to lie lowest in energy for each composition studied. For the two BeX2 compounds studied, polymorphs not yet synthesized are predicted to lie very low in energy, either slightly above or even in between the energy of the experimentally observed polymorphs. The experimental lack of polymorphism for tetrahedral halide materials thus does not appear to stem from a lack of low-energy polymorphs but more likely is the result of a lack of experimental exploration. Our calculations further indicate that the rich polymorphic chemistry of SiO2 can be potentially matched, if not extended, by BeF2, provided that milder synthetic conditions similar to those employed in zeolite synthesis are developed for BeF2. Finally, our work demonstrates that both classes of materials show the same behavior upon replacement of the 2p anion with the heavier 3p anion from the same group; the thermodynamic preference shifts from structures with large rings to structures with larger fractions of small two and three membered rings.
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