Crystals (Apr 2019)

Hydrogenation Properties of <i>Ln</i>Al<sub>2</sub> (<i>Ln</i> = La, Eu, Yb), LaGa<sub>2</sub>, LaSi<sub>2</sub> and the Crystal Structure of LaGa<sub>2</sub>H<sub>0.71(2)</sub>

  • Anton Werwein,
  • Christopher Benndorf,
  • Marko Bertmer,
  • Alexandra Franz,
  • Oliver Oeckler,
  • Holger Kohlmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst9040193
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. 193

Abstract

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Many Zintl phases take up hydrogen and form hydrides. Hydrogen atoms occupy interstitial sites formed by alkali or alkaline earth metals and/or bind covalently to the polyanions. The latter is the case for polyanionic hydrides like SrTr2H2 (Tr = Al, Ga) with slightly puckered honeycomb-like polyanions decorated with hydrogen atoms. This study addresses the hydrogenation behavior of LnTr2, where the lanthanide metals Ln introduce one additional valence electron. Hydrogenation reactions were performed in autoclaves and followed by thermal analysis up to 5.0 MPa hydrogen gas pressure. Products were analyzed by powder X-ray and neutron diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and NMR spectroscopy. Phases LnAl2 (Ln = La, Eu, Yb) decompose into binary hydrides and aluminium-rich intermetallics upon hydrogenation, while LaGa2 forms a ternary hydride LaGa2H0.71(2). Hydrogen atoms are statistically distributed over two kinds of trigonal-bipyramidal La3Ga2 interstitials with 67% and 4% occupancy, respectively. Ga-H distances (2.4992(2) Å) are considerably longer than in polyanionic hydrides and not indicative of covalent bonding. 2H solid-state NMR spectroscopy and theoretical calculations on Density Functional Theory (DFT) level confirm that LaGa2H0.7 is a typical interstitial metallic hydride.

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