Abstract

The first bismuth borate oxyiodide, Bi4BO7I, has been prepared by solid-state reaction in evacuated silica ampoules. Its crystal structure [space group Immm(00γ)000] comprises litharge-related layers of edge-sharing OBi4 tetrahedra; the interlayer space is filled by I- and [BO3]3- anions. The wavevector, q= 0.242 (3)c*, is very close to the rational value of c*/4, yet refinement based on commensurate modulation faces serious problems indicating the incommensurate nature of the modulation. The I-/[BO3]3- anions are ordered in a complex sequence along [001], i.e. -<-BO3-BO3-I-I->n=28-I-I-I-<-BO3-BO3-I-I->n= 28-BO3-BO3-BO3-, leading to a structural modulation. The principal feature of the latter is the presence of -I-I-I- and -BO3-BO3-BO3- sequences that cannot be accounted for in the a× b× 4c supercell. The thermal expansion of Bi4BO7I is weakly anisotropic (αa= 8, αb= 15 and αc= 17× 10-6 K-1 at 500 K) which is caused by preferential orientation of the borate groups.

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