Pressure-Driven Sequential Lattice Collapse and Magnetic Collapse in Transition-Metal-Intercalated Compounds FexNbS2.

2021 
Volume collapse under high pressure is an intriguing phenomenon involving subtle interplay between lattice, spin, and charge. The two most important causes of volume collapse are lattice collapse (low-density to high-density) and magnetic collapse (high-spin to low-spin). Herein we report the pressure-driven sequential volume collapses in partially intercalated FexNbS2 (x = 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 2/3). Because of the distinct interlayer atomic occupancy, the low-iron-content samples exhibit both lattice and magnetic collapses under compression, whereas the high-iron-content samples exhibit only one magnetic collapse. Theoretical calculations indicate that the low-pressure volume collapses for x = 1/4 and x = 1/3 are lattice collapses, and the high-pressure volume collapses for all four samples are magnetic collapses. The magnetic collapse involving the high-spin to low-spin crossover of Fe2+ has also been verified by in situ X-ray emission measurements. Integrating two distinct volume collapses into one material provides a rare playground of lattice, spin, and charge.
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