Negative thermal
expansion (NTE) materials generally
have high-symmetry
space groups, large average atomic volumes, and corner-sharing octahedral
and tetrahedral coordination structures. By contrast, monoclinic α-Cu2P2O7, which has a small average atomic
volume and edge-sharing structure, has been reported to exhibit NTE,
the detailed mechanism of which is unclear. In this study, we investigate
the A2B2O7 polymorphs and analyze the NTE behavior of α-Cu2P2O7 using first-principles lattice-dynamics
calculations. From the polymorphism investigation in 20 A2B2O7 compounds
using 6 representative crystal structures, small A and B cationic radii are found to stabilize the
α-Cu2P2O7-type structure. We
then analyze the NTE behavior of α-Cu2P2O7 using quasi-harmonic approximation. Our calculated
thermal expansion coefficients and anisotropic atomic displacement
parameters were in good agreement with those of the experimental reports
at low temperatures. From the mode-Grüneisen parameter distribution
plotted over the entire first-Brillouin zone, we found that the phonon
contributing most significantly to NTE emerges not into the special
points but between them. In this phonon mode, the O connecting two
PO4 tetrahedra rotates, and the Cu and O vibrate perpendicular
to the bottom of the CuO5 pyramidal unit, which folds the ac lattice plane. This vibration behavior can explain the
experimentally reported anisotropic NTE behavior of α-Cu2P2O7. Our results demonstrate that the
most negative mode-Grüneisen parameter contributing to NTE
behavior is not always located on high-symmetry special points, indicating
the importance of lattice vibration analyses for the entire first-Brillouin
zone.