Publication | Open Access
Discovering Electron‐Transfer‐Driven Changes in Chemical Bonding in Lead Chalcogenides (PbX, where X = Te, Se, S, O)
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Citations
36
References
2020
Year
Understanding the nature of chemical bonding in solids is crucial to comprehend the physical and chemical properties of a given compound. To explore changes in chemical bonding in lead chalcogenides (PbX, where X = Te, Se, S, O), a combination of property-, bond-breaking-, and quantum-mechanical bonding descriptors are applied. The outcome of the explorations reveals an electron-transfer-driven transition from metavalent bonding in PbX (X = Te, Se, S) to iono-covalent bonding in β-PbO. Metavalent bonding is characterized by adjacent atoms being held together by sharing about a single electron (ES ≈ 1) and small electron transfer (ET). The transition from metavalent to iono-covalent bonding manifests itself in clear changes in these quantum-mechanical descriptors (ES and ET), as well as in property-based descriptors (i.e., Born effective charge (Z*), dielectric function ε(ω), effective coordination number (ECoN), and mode-specific Grüneisen parameter (γ<sub>TO</sub> )), and in bond-breaking descriptors. Metavalent bonding collapses if significant charge localization occurs at the ion cores (ET) and/or in the interatomic region (ES). Predominantly changing the degree of electron transfer opens possibilities to tailor material properties such as the chemical bond (Z*) and electronic (ε<sub>∞</sub> ) polarizability, optical bandgap, and optical interband transitions characterized by ε<sub>2</sub> (ω). Hence, the insights gained from this study highlight the technological relevance of the concept of metavalent bonding and its potential for materials design.
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