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American Chemical Society, Journal of the American Chemical Society, 3(136), p. 1070-1081, 2014

DOI: 10.1021/ja411057x

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Pressure Induced Phase Transitions and Metallization of a Neutral Radical Conductor

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This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The crystal structure and charge transport properties of the prototypal oxobenzene-bridged 1,2,3-bisdithiazolyl radical conductor 3a are strongly dependent on pressure. Compression of the as-crystallized α-phase, space group Fdd2, to 3-4 GPa leads to its conversion into a second or β-phase, in which F-centering is lost. The space group symmetry is lowered to Pbn21, and there is concomitant halving of the a and b axes. A third or γ-phase, also space group Pbn21, is generated by further compression to 8 GPa. The changes in packing that accompany both phase transitions are associated with an "ironing out" of the ruffled ribbon-like architecture of the α-phase, so that consecutive radicals along the ribbons are rendered more nearly coplanar. In the β-phase the planar ribbons are propagated along the b-glides, while in the γ-phase they follow the n-glides. At ambient pressure 3a is a Mott insulator, displaying high but activated conductivity, with σ(300 K) = 6 × 10(-3) S cm(-1) and Eact = 0.16 eV. With compression beyond 4 GPa, its conductivity is increased by 3 orders of magnitude, and the thermal activation energy is reduced to zero, heralding the formation of a metallic state. High pressure infrared absorption and reflectivity measurements are consistent with closure of the Mott-Hubbard gap near 4-5 GPa. The results are discussed in the light of DFT calculations on the molecular and band electronic structure of 3a. The presence of a low-lying LUMO in 3a gives rise to high electron affinity which, in turn, creates an electronically much softer radical with a low onsite Coulomb potential U. In addition, considerable crystal orbital (SOMO/LUMO) mixing occurs upon pressurization, so that a metallic state is readily achieved at relatively low applied pressure.