posted on 2022-02-16, 20:07authored byAnna Pakhomova, Ines E. Collings, Baptiste Journaux, Sylvain Petitgirard, Tiziana Boffa Ballaran, Dongyang Huang, Jason Ott, Alexander Kurnosov, Michael Hanfland, Gaston Garbarino, Davide Comboni
The
phenomenon of host–guest hydrogen bonding in clathrate
hydrate crystal structures and its effect on physical and chemical
properties have become subjects of extensive research. Hydrogen bonding
has been studied for cubic (sI and sII) and hexagonal (sH) binary
clathrates, while it has not been addressed for clathrate structures
that exist at elevated pressures. Here, four acetone hydrate clathrates
have been grown at high-pressure and low-temperature conditions. In situ single-crystal X-ray diffraction revealed that the
synthesized phases possess already known trigonal (sTr), orthorhombic
(sO), and tetragonal (sT) crystal structures as well as a previously
unknown orthorhombic structure, so-called sO-II. Only sO and sII have
previously been reported for acetone clathrates. Structural analysis
suggests that acetone oxygens are hydrogen-bonded to the closest water
oxygens of the host frameworks. Our discoveries show that clathrate
hydrates hosting polar molecules are not as exotic as previously thought
and could be stabilized at high-pressure conditions through hydrogen
bonding.