Abstract

Competition between microscopic point defect (vacancy and interstitial) configurations is inherent to crystalline phases of increased structural complexity. Phase transitions that preserve symmetry between them belong to a specific class of isostructural transitions. Type-I silicon clathrates are representatives of such structurally complex crystalline phases showing an intriguing structural transition at high pressure associated with an abrupt reduction of volume with no indication for any breakage of symmetry. Using isothermal high-pressure X-ray diffraction performed on a single crystal of the simplest representative type-I silicon clathrates, binary Ba8Si46, we confirm the isostructural character of the transition and identify the associated mechanism. A detailed analysis of the atomic structural parameters across the transition in combination with ab initio studies allow us to pinpoint a microscopic mechanism driven by a rearrangement of point defects initially present in the structure. An analysis based on the Landau theory gives a coherent description of the experimental observations. A discussion on the analogy between this transformation and liquid-liquid transitions is proposed.

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