Pressure-induced Transformations of Dense Carbonyl Sulfide to Singly Bonded Amorphous Metallic Solid

ORAL

Abstract

The application of internal or external pressure transforms molecular solids into non-molecular extended solids with diverse crystal structures and electronic transport properties. Here, we present pressure-induced phase transitions and associated structural and electric transitions of carbonyl sulfide (OCS) using Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, resistivity measurement and pair distribution function (PDF) analysis. Linear molcular OCS(R3m, Phase I) transforms to bent OCS (Cm, Phase II) at 9 GPa, an amorphous, one-dimensional (1D) polymer at 20 GPa (Phase III), and an extended 3D network above ~35 GPa (Phase IV) that metallizes at ~105 GPa. Series of phase transformations reveal that long-range dipole interaction plays an important role in the transition regime of dense molecular solid and intermediate nature of OCS between its two isovalent end members of CO$_2$ and CS$_2$ leads to an important chemical concept for the extended molecular alloy.

*The present study has been supported by NSF-DMR (Grant No. 1203834), DTRA (HDTRA1-12-01-0020), and Sloan Foundation through the DCO-EPC.

Authors

  • Minseob Kim

    • Washington State Univ
  • Ranga Dias

    • Washington State University
  • Yasuo Ohishi

    • Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute
  • Takahiro Matsuoka

    • Gifu University
  • Jing-Yin Chen

    • Washington State University
  • Choong-Shik Yoo

    • Washington State University