A reinterpretation of the phase transitions in Na2CO3

Acta Crystallogr B. 2005 Dec;61(Pt 6):601-7. doi: 10.1107/S0108768105033008. Epub 2005 Nov 14.

Abstract

Based on the structural data of phases alpha (hexagonal; 756-972 K), beta (monoclinic; 605-751 K), gamma (incommensurate, monoclinic; 295 K) and delta (lock-in, monoclinic; 110 K) of sodium carbonate, Na2CO3, we could draw a parallel between the phase transitions and the evolution of the second coordination sphere of the C atoms. The temperature-dependent structures observed in the beta phase are reproduced in the incommensurate gamma phase as a modulation wave, which relates to the content of the symmetrically equivalent {110} lattice planes in the alpha phase. By decreasing the temperature, the phase transitions are associated with a stepwise increase in the number of Na ions participating in the second coordination sphere of the C atoms. Over the full temperature range, this number increases from 3 to 7. The C-O distances and the mobility of the O atoms depends on the number of Na ions in the vicinity of the C atoms.