Inorganics (Nov 2023)

Structural Phase Transitions in the Double Salts (NH<sub>4</sub>)<sub>2</sub>PO<sub>3</sub>F·NH<sub>4</sub>NO<sub>3</sub> and (NH<sub>4</sub>)<sub>2</sub><i>X</i>O<sub>4</sub>·3NH<sub>4</sub>NO<sub>3</sub> (<i>X</i> = Se, Cr)

  • Matthias Weil,
  • Thomas Häusler,
  • Barbara Bonneau,
  • Ekkehard Füglein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/inorganics11110433
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. 433

Abstract

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In the context of investigating isostructural relationships between sulfates and monofluorophosphates, crystals of the double salts (NH4)2PO3F·NH4NO3 (AFP·AN) and (NH4)2XO4·3NH4NO3 (AX·3AN; X = Se, Cr) were grown from aqueous solutions and structurally characterized using X-ray diffraction and thermal analysis. Whereas the high-temperature forms of the two AX·3AN double salts are in fact isostructural with the sulfate analogue, AFP·AN crystallizes with a reduced amount of NH4NO3 and thus has a unique crystal structure. Both AFP·AN and the two AX·3AN compounds exhibit reversible structural phase transitions. Upon cooling, the monofluorophosphate double salt transforms from the monoclinic room-temperature polymorph (I; P21/n, Z = 4) to the intermediate triclinic polymorph (II; P1, Z = 4) that in turn transforms to the monoclinic low-temperature polymorph (III; P21/n, Z = 4). The two phase transitions (I) → (II) and (II) → (III) are characterized by a significant increase of the unit cell volumes upon cooling. The two AX·3AN double salts transform upon cooling from a disordered monoclinic crystal structure (P21, Z = 2) to a monoclinic polymorph with a doubled unit cell (P21/c, Z = 4). Such a phase transition is not observed for the sulfate analogue. All molecular moieties are fully ordered at −93 °C for the selenate double salt, whereas one of the nitrate anions remains disordered for the chromate double salt even at −173 °C. In all AFP·AN and AX·3AN crystal structures, the nitrate anions play a crucial role during the phase transitions, and an extensive network of N–H···O hydrogen-bonding interactions is responsible for the cohesion of the crystal.

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