Novel gold intermetallics with unique properties and bonding patterns
Author(s) -
Chris Celania
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1417986
Subject(s) - chemistry , amine gas treating , isocyanate , nucleophile , dehydrogenation , isocyanide , benzylamine , yield (engineering) , nucleophilic addition , medicinal chemistry , oxide , inorganic chemistry , catalysis , polymer chemistry , photochemistry , organic chemistry , materials science , metallurgy , polyurethane
Gold has drawn the fascination of society through its brilliant color, malleability, and chemical resistance (hence its chemical nobility) since its discovery in ancient times. Today, this material is still highly coveted by consumers, but also for research within the scientific realm. The inclusion of gold in intermetallics often leads to notably unique structural and bonding features due to the pronounced relativistic effects on its 5d and 6s orbitals. Examples include quasicrystals and their approximants, unique gold clusters such as isolated Au7 clusters in A4Au7X2 (A = K, Rb, Cs; X = Ge, Sn), one dimensional columns such as Au zig-zag chains through Ca3Au3In, two dimensional slabs, such as in K2Au3, as well as three dimensional gold networks as observed in the interconnected trigonal bipyramids in KAu5, hexagonal diamondlike frameworks of Au tetrahedra in Au-rich Sr-Au-Al systems; and combinations of tetrahedral and fourfold planar Au atoms in Rb3Au7. In recent years, compounds in the gold-rich region of the R-Au-M system (R = rare earth, M = groups 13-15) have come under increased study. Many compounds within this system produce varied electronic and magnetic properties such as Pauli paramagnetism, superconductivity, thermoelectricity, etc. The shielded 4f electrons of the added rare earth elements provide the unpaired spins that lead to the wealth of interesting magnetic properties in their compounds. Metals and metalloids from groups 13-15 may then be used as a bank of available options useful in tuning the valence electron count of the R-Au system toward the formation of stable compounds. Exploration of the Gd-Au-Sb system by utilizing common solid state synthesis techniques frequently used for the production of intermetallics (such as arc melting and high-
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