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The Yellow Polymorphs of Mercuric Iodide (HgI 2 )
Author(s) -
Hostettler Marc,
Birkedal Henrik,
Schwarzenbach Dieter
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
helvetica chimica acta
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.74
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1522-2675
pISSN - 0018-019X
DOI - 10.1002/hlca.200390126
Subject(s) - chemistry , crystallography , phase transition , sublimation (psychology) , raman spectroscopy , metastability , x ray crystallography , diffraction , orange (colour) , crystal structure , analytical chemistry (journal) , optics , psychology , physics , organic chemistry , chromatography , quantum mechanics , psychotherapist , food science
HgI 2 crystallizes under ambient conditions from various solvents and by sublimation into three concomitant polymorphs whose colors are red, orange, and yellow. The orange and yellow phases are metastable and transform into the red phase when touched. A phase transition from red to yellow occurs at 400 K. The reverse transition from yellow to red shows a huge hysteresis. We established that the structures of the metastable yellow M phase (determined by single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction) and the high‐temperature yellow HT phase (determined by powder synchrotron X‐ray diffraction and second‐harmonic generation) are different, albeit closely related. Both show analogous packings of IHgI molecules, which are straight in the first and bent with an angle of ca. 160° in the second. The red and orange phases are tetrahedral semiconductor structures that sublime even at room temperature. The growth of the yellow M phase from 2‐chloroethanol and the kinetics of the reconstructive phase transition red to yellow HT and back were studied by optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy in solution, luminescence, and powder synchrotron X‐ray diffraction as a function of time at various temperatures. Both yellow phases grow by accretion of HgI 2 molecules, present in the solution or liberated from the red crystals, on the surface of the crystal. In contrast, the reverse transformation from yellow to red occurs in the bulk of the crystal, presumably by migration of Hg in the packing of I and subsequent rearrangement of I. The displacement parameters of Hg in both structures are considerably larger than those of I and apparently not dominated by disorder effects.