High-Pressure Spectral Studies of Mixed Valence Compounds of Antimony
- 1 November 1973
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 70 (11) , 3065-3066
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.70.11.3065
Abstract
In Cs(2)SbCl(6) and related compounds antimony appears as Sb(III) and Sb(V) in alternate halide octahedra. The optical spectrum contains "mixed valence" peaks assigned to Sb(III) --> Sb(V) transfer near 18 and 27 kK (cm(-1)). In addition there is a peak near 31 kK assigned to an internal transition on Sb(III) and one near 37 kK assigned to Sb(V), mixed with the absorption edge of the crystal. The mixed valence peaks shift strongly to lower energy with pressure (about 5 kK in 120 kbar), and decrease rapidly in integrated intensity, as does the Sb(III) peak near 31 kK. A new peak appears near 33-34 kK, tentatively assigned to Sb(IV). The ground state apparently transforms from Sb(III)-Sb(V) to Sb(IV)-Sb(IV) at high pressure. Similar behavior is observed for Cs(2)Sb(0.3)Sn(0.7)Cl(6) and (CH(3)CH(2)NH(3))(2)Sb(0.5)Sn(0.5)Cl(6).Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Optical Versus Thermal Transitions in Solids at High PressureProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1972