posted on 2020-01-21, 21:13authored byVladislav
V. Klepov, Kristen A. Pace, Logan S. Breton, Vancho Kocevski, Theodore M. Besmann, Hans-Conrad zur Loye
The
effect of lanthanide contraction often results in topological
and symmetry changes in compounds with the same compositions as a
function of lanthanide cation size. Here we report on the first example
of a lanthanide thiophosphate exhibiting a change in the lanthanide
cation environment without any topological or symmetry change. A series
of new lanthanide thiophosphates with mixed alkali cations were obtained
via a flux crystal growth technique using a CsI flux. The obtained
compounds Cs2NaLn(PS4)2 (Ln = La–Nd,
Sm, and Gd–Ho) were grown as large single crystals (∼0.1–1
mm3) and characterized using single-crystal X-ray diffraction
and magnetic susceptibility measurements. As we moved across the series,
the structural studies revealed a change in the lanthanide coordination
environment depending on the identity of the lanthanide. Although
all compounds in the Cs2NaLn(PS4)2 series crystallize in the same space group and have the same Wyckoff
atom positions, a slight change in size between Sm3+ and
Gd3+ causes a subtle change in coordination number from
9 (for Ln = La–Sm) to 8 (for Ln = Gd–Ho), resulting
in two distinct but virtually identical structure types. Ab initio
calculations were performed, and the observed experimental trend was
corroborated computationally. Magnetic measurements performed on the
Cs2NaLn(PS4)2 (Ln = Ce, Pr, Nd, Gd,
and Tb) compounds revealed paramagnetic behavior.