Pressure-driven structural and electronic transitions in a quasimolecular layered compound of antimony triiodide†
Abstract
Quasimolecular layered metal triiodides MI3 (M = Sb and Bi) hold immense promise in applications of solid-state batteries, radiation detectors, and photocatalysts owing to their favorable physicochemical properties. As a representative MI3 compound, antimony triiodide (SbI3) exhibits high-pressure phase stability beyond 16.0 GPa and its electrical transport behaviors remain largely unknown. In this study, we systemically investigated the structural and electronic transitions of SbI3 during compression and decompression under different hydrostatic environments using synchrotron X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, electrical conductivity, and first-principles theoretical calculations. During compression, SbI3 endured two isostructural phase transitions (IPTs) at the respective pressures of 3.4 GPa and 10.3 GPa stemming from the prominent compression of the c-axis and Sb–I bond. Upon further compression to 32.3 GPa, an electronic transition from the semiconductor to metal occurred in SbI3 under non-hydrostatic conditions, which was possibly associated with the rhombohedral (R)-to-monoclinic (C2/m) structural transformation. Under hydrostatic conditions, a considerable pressure hysteresis of ∼5.0 GPa was detected for the emergence of metallization owing to the faint deviatoric stress. During decompression, the phase transition of SbI3 was revealed to be irreversible under different hydrostatic environments, which was probably caused by the huge kinetic barrier for the continuous high-pressure structural transitions. Our high-pressure study on SbI3 offers an in-depth insight into the correlations between crystalline and electronic structures, and may facilitate the application of quasimolecular layered crystals in optoelectronic devices.