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arxiv: 2102.08541 · v1 · pith:LZKHJA5A · submitted 2021-02-17 · cond-mat.mtrl-sci · physics.comp-ph

Negative linear compressibility and unusual dynamic behaviors of NaB3

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classification cond-mat.mtrl-sci physics.comp-ph
keywords nab3phasebehaviorcompressibilityconditionslinearnegativepbam
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First-principles calculations reveal that sodium boride (NaB3) undergoes a phase transition from a tetragonal P4/mbm phase to an orthorhombic Pbam phase at about 16 GPa, accompanied by counterintuitive lattice expansion along the crystallographic a-axis. This unusual compression behavior is identified as negative linear compressibility (NLC), which is dominantly attributed to the symmetry-breaking of boron framework. Meanwhile, the P4/mbm and Pbam phases form superionic conductors after undergoing a peculiar swap state at high temperature. Specifically, under warm conditions the Na cation pairs exhibit a rare local exchange (or rotation) behavior, which may be originated from the asymmetric energy barriers of different diffusion paths. The study of NaB3 compound sheds new light on a material with the combination of NLC and ion transportation at extreme conditions.

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