Room-Temperature Solid-State Transformation of Na4 SnS4 ⋅ 14H2 O into Na4 Sn2 S6 ⋅ 5H2 O: An Unusual Epitaxial Reaction Including Bond Formation, Mass Transport, and Ionic Conductivity

Chemistry. 2023 Jan 2;29(1):e202202318. doi: 10.1002/chem.202202318. Epub 2022 Nov 16.

Abstract

A highly unusual solid-state epitaxy-induced phase transformation of Na4 SnS4 ⋅ 14H2 O (I) into Na4 Sn2 S6 ⋅ 5H2 O (II) occurs at room temperature. Ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations indicate an internal acid-base reaction to form [SnS3 SH]3- which condensates to [Sn2 S6 ]4- . The reaction involves a complex sequence of O-H bond cleavage, S2- protonation, Sn-S bond formation and diffusion of various species while preserving the crystal morphology. In situ Raman and IR spectroscopy evidence the formation of [Sn2 S6 ]4- . DFT calculations allowed assignment of all bands appearing during the transformation. X-ray diffraction and in situ 1 H NMR demonstrate a transformation within several days and yield a reaction turnover of ≈0.38 %/h. AIMD and experimental ionic conductivity data closely follow a Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann type T dependence with D(Na)=6×10-14 m2 s-1 at T=300 K with values increasing by three orders of magnitude from -20 to +25 °C.

Keywords: AIMD simulations; Epitaxy; Infrared spectroscopy; Ionic conductivity; Magic angle spinning NMR; Raman spectroscopy.