Issue 20, 2017

Thermodynamic cycles of the alkali metal–ligand complexes central to electride formation

Abstract

Alkali metal–ligand complexes are the building blocks of the exotic organic alkalide and electride materials. In this work, density-functional theory is used to construct thermodynamic cycles for the alkali metal–ligand complexes, highlighting the energy changes that enable alkalide and electride formation. Strong alkali metal- and cation-to-ligand binding energies are predicted and Rydberg-like ground states of the alkali metal–ligand complexes are identified, consistent with previous work. Calculations on molecular electride species do not reveal consistency with the identified trends, suggesting that the molecular electrides are a class of material unto themselves. The ionisation potentials of the alkali metal–ligand complexes are calculated to be consistently between 1 and 2 eV, suggesting that a specific ionisation potential (IP) is central to electride formation. Further, the thermodynamic cycle for the simplest electride, Cs+(15C5)2e, shows stabilisation of the solid crystal due to electride formation that is consistent in magnitude with the IP of the equivalent alkali metal–ligand complex. In light of this, computational screening of the alkali metal–ligand complexes' IP presents a new design criterion for alkalide and electride materials.

Graphical abstract: Thermodynamic cycles of the alkali metal–ligand complexes central to electride formation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 feb. 2017
Accepted
18 apr. 2017
First published
25 apr. 2017

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2017,19, 12816-12825

Thermodynamic cycles of the alkali metal–ligand complexes central to electride formation

S. G. Dale and E. R. Johnson, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2017, 19, 12816 DOI: 10.1039/C7CP00882A

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