Hg4(Te2O5)(SO4): A Giant Birefringent Sulfate
Crystal Triggered by a Highly
Selective Cation
Posted on 2024-03-08 - 20:13
Sulfate crystals are often criticized for their low birefringence.
The small anisotropic SO4 group is becoming the biggest
bottleneck hindering the application of sulfates in optical functional
materials. In this study, we report a new method to significantly
enhance the birefringence of sulfates. The title compound increases
the birefringence recording of sulfates to 0.542@546 nm, which is
significantly larger than that of the commercial birefringent crystal
of TiO2 (0.306@546.1 nm). At the infrared wavelength, the
birefringence of Hg4(Te2O5)(SO4) can be up to 0.400@1064 nm, which is also much larger than
the infrared birefringent crystal of YVO4 (0.209@1064 nm).
In addition, it also has a wide transparency range, high thermal stability,
and excellent environmental stability, making it a potential birefringent
material. Hg4(Te2O5)(SO4) features a novel two-dimensional layered structure composed of
[Hg4(Te2O5)]2+ layers
separated by isolated (SO4)2– tetrahedra.
This compound was designed by introducing a highly selective cation
in a tellurite sulfate system. The low valence low coordination cations
connect with tellurite groups only, making the sulfate isolated in
the structure. The steric repulsive action of the isolated SO4 tetrahedra may regulate the linear and lone pair groups arranged
in a way that favors large birefringence. This method can be proven
by theoretical calculations. PAWED studies showed that the large birefringence
originated from the synergistic effect of (Hg2O2)2–, (Te2O5)2–, and (SO4)2– units, with a contribution
ratio of 42.17, 37.92, and 19.88%, respectively. Our work breaks the
limitation of low birefringence in sulfates and opens up new possibilities
for their application as birefringent crystals.
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Li, Peng-Fei; Hu, Chun-Li; Li, Ya-Feng; Mao, Jiang-Gao; Kong, Fang (2024). Hg4(Te2O5)(SO4): A Giant Birefringent Sulfate
Crystal Triggered by a Highly
Selective Cation. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c01740