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High‐Pressure Synthesis of Tantalum Nitride Having Orthorhombic U 2 S 3 Structure
Author(s) -
Zerr Andreas,
Miehe Gerhard,
Li Jinwang,
Dzivenko Dmytro A.,
Bulatov Vadim K.,
Höfer Heidi,
BolfanCasanova Nathalie,
Fialin Michel,
Brey Gerhard,
Watanabe Tomoaki,
Yoshimura Masahiro
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.200801923
Subject(s) - nitride , materials science , orthorhombic crystal system , tantalum , tantalum nitride , stoichiometry , crystallite , crystallography , high pressure , crystal structure , nanotechnology , thermodynamics , metallurgy , chemistry , layer (electronics) , physics
Among binary compounds, there is a high potential for discovery of novel members (polymorphic phases or compounds) of the nitrides of transition metals group due to a pronounced dependence of the oxidation state of the metals (M) on pressure. The power of high pressure–high temperature (HP‐HT) route for synthesis of binary nitrides has already been demonstrated by the discovery of cubic nitrides of the group 4 and 14 elements, of crystalline polymorphs of P 3 N 5 , and by reports on formation of four noble metal nitrides. It is anticipated that such HP products exhibit, in addition to enhanced elastic and mechanical behavior, other functional properties making them interesting for industrial applications. Here, HP–HT synthesis research is extended to nitrides of group 5 elements, resulting in the discovery of a novel hard tantalum nitride, exhibiting U 2 S 3 structure: η ‐Ta 2 N 3 ( Pbnm , a = 8.1911(17) Å, b = 8.1830(17) Å, c = 2.9823(3) Å). The stoichiometry is supported by two independent means, verifying that η ‐Ta 2 N 3 is the first thermodynamically stable transition metal nitride with a N:M ratio exceeding 4:3. Due to its high hardness and peculiar texture (needle‐like and granular crystallites), η ‐Ta 2 N 3 may find practical applications as a hard fracture resistant material.