Destabilization of ionic compounds under compression: a case of copper halides

Abstract

Hydrostatic pressure profoundly alters chemical bonding and stability, yet it can also trigger counterintuitive decomposition in ionic compounds. In the Cu–X (X = F, Cl, Br, I) systems, we identify a striking contrast: Cu–Cl, Cu–Br, and Cu–I decompose into their elemental solids at high pressures, whereas Cu–F becomes progressively more stable. This divergence is governed by two synergistic factors from our mechanistic analysis: (1) thermodynamically, the ΔPV term dominates stability—volume difference (ΔV) stays negative for Cu–F (favoring stabilization) but turns positive above ∼10 GPa for other halides (driving decomposition); (2) microscopically, unstable halides exhibit weakened bonding under high pressure: reduced ionic character (lower Bader charge/Madelung energy), attenuated covalency, and increased antibonding states below the Fermi level, triggered by large Cu-3d band downshifts. Our work resolves the contradiction of “decomposition despite increasing electronegativity difference” under high pressure and establishes a framework linking volume effects/electronic structure to ionic compound stability, guiding the design of extreme-environment materials.

Graphical abstract: Destabilization of ionic compounds under compression: a case of copper halides

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Nov 2025
Accepted
09 Feb 2026
First published
10 Feb 2026

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Advance Article

Destabilization of ionic compounds under compression: a case of copper halides

Y. Geng, J. Li, Q. Rui, Y. Liu, J. Yuan, J. Lin and X. Wang, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5CP04329H

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