Crystal structure of magnesium dichloride decahydrate determined by X-ray and neutron diffraction under high pressure

Acta Crystallogr B Struct Sci Cryst Eng Mater. 2015 Feb;71(Pt 1):74-80. doi: 10.1107/S205252061500027X. Epub 2015 Feb 1.

Abstract

Magnesium dichloride decahydrate (MgCl2·10H2O) and its deuterated counterpart (MgCl2·10D2O) are identified for the first time by in-situ powder synchrotron X-ray and spallation neutron diffraction. These substances are crystallized from a previously unidentified nanocrystalline compound, which originates from an amorphous state at low temperature. A combination of a recently developed autoindexing procedure and the charge-flipping method reveals that the crystal structure of MgCl2·10H2O consists of an ABCABC··· sequence of Mg(H2O)6 octahedra. The Cl(-) anions and remaining water molecules unconnected to the Mg(2+) cations bind the octahedra, similar to other water-rich magnesium dichloride hydrates. The D positions in MgCl2·10D2O, determined by the difference Fourier methods using the neutron powder diffraction patterns at 2.5 GPa, show the features such as bifurcated hydrogen bonds and tetrahedrally coordinated O atoms, which were not found in other forms of magnesium chloride hydrates.

Keywords: X-ray powder diffraction; charge-flipping method; high pressure; magnesium dichloride hydrate; spallation neutron diffraction.