research communications
Growth and characterization of a new inorganic metal–halide 2Cl5
InPbaDepartment of Chemistry, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada
*Correspondence e-mail: wang.peng@chem.queensu.ca
A new solid-state inorganic compound, indium dilead pentachloride, InPb2Cl5, was synthesized by melting InCl and PbCl2 in a vacuum-sealed quartz ampoule. The ampoule was heated to 793 K and then slowly cooled to room temperature to induce crystallization of InPb2Cl5. InPb2Cl5 crystallizes in the monoclinic adopting a of type P21/c, which is isostructural with other metal halides such as RbPb2Cl5, KPb2Cl5 and TlPb2Cl5. The bulk InPb2Cl5 exhibits a metallic black/grey colour, allowing it to be separated from white/yellow PbCl2 crystals. Due to the incongruent nature of the compound, the pure bulk InPb2Cl5 was not obtained. The black/grey InPb2Cl5 crystals were characterized by powder and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. InPbCl3 was also explored, however the growth was unsuccessful.
Keywords: crystal structure; inorganic; InPb2Cl5; solid-state.
CCDC reference: 2294068
1. Chemical context
Indium lead chloride, InPb2Cl5 is a metal halide that has been studied as a new material to be used in optoelectronic semiconducting applications. Other isostructural metal halides that have the structure APb2Cl5 (where A = K, Rb, Tl) have gained interest in fields such as optoelectronics (Vu et al., 2020), and photovoltaics as a (Isaenko et al., 2013; Khyzhun et al., 2014; Brown et al., 2013). There has been success in growing metal-halide semiconducting crystals such as RbPb2Cl5 and KPb2Cl5 (Isaenko et al., 2013; Rowe et al., 2014; Isaenko et al., 2009), however single-crystal InPb2Cl5 has not been reported and has only been computationally studied as the InPbCl3 phase (Khan et al., 2022). Similar to RbPb2Cl5, KPb2Cl5, and TlPb2Cl5, InPb2Cl5 crystallizes in a monoclinic structure and has a of type P21/c. Bulk InPb2Cl5 samples were prepared, which contained a mixture of black/grey metallic polycrystalline InPb2Cl5 at the bottom of the ampoule and white/yellow PbCl2 crystals above. When the black/grey crystals were broken up, the crystals appeared to have a much clearer and lighter green hue. The broken-up crystal was examined under an optical microscope and clear colourless crystal pieces were seen. The clear colourless single-crystal pieces were handpicked and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (XRD). The bulk material was ground using a mortar and pestle and the powder was characterized by powder-XRD. The powder-XRD pattern had low intensity peaks of In7Cl9 and PbCl2 impurities, but matched closely with the InPb2Cl5 phase. When InPb2Cl5 was left in ambient conditions over four months, the bulk absorbed moisture over time and left a light-grey film around the bulk with moisture build up on the side of the material.
2. Structural commentary
The single-crystal structure of InPb2Cl5 was found to adopt a monoclinic P21/c The single-crystal structure confirmed the composition as InPb2Cl5. The bond lengths in the (Fig. 1) of InPb2Cl5 are listed in Table 1. The of InPb2Cl5 (Fig. 2) has four symmetry-related formula units. The Pb atoms in the (Fig. 2) coordinate multiple chlorine atoms that give a range of bond lengths from 2.868 (5)–3.3145 (15) Å. The Pb1 atoms coordinate with seven chlorine atoms in the structure, with bond lengths ranging from 2.868 (5)–3.1371 (14) Å. The Pb1 atoms form a nine-face polyhedron with a volume of 37.374 Å3 (Fig. 3). The Pb2 atoms have a of 8 with bond lengths from 2.916 (7)–3.3145 (15) Å. The Pb2 atoms form a 12-face dodecahedron with a volume of 49.796 Å3 (Fig. 3). The shortest bond length is between Cl1 and Pb1, which is 2.868 (5) Å. The largest bond lengths are between the Pb2 atom and a Cl3 atom at 3.3145 (15) Å. The typical bond length between Pb and Cl atoms is 2.44 Å in the binary structure. There is an increase in bond lengths from the binary PbCl2 to the InPb2Cl5 structure. The indium atom interstitially coordinates eight chlorine atoms in a distorted octahedral geometry. The range of indium–chlorine bonds range from 3.1447 (18)–3.588 (8) Å. The indium atom forms a 12-face dodecahedron with a volume of 62.568 Å3 (Fig. 3). The typical In—Cl bond length is around 2.56 Å, indicating that the indium–chlorine bonds have a much weaker interaction in the InPb2Cl5 structure. The largest bond angles seen in the (Fig. 2) are between the Cl1iii—Pb1—Cl2 atoms at 156.02 (3)° (symmetry codes as per Fig. 2). The shortest bond angle in the structure is between the Cl4ii—In1—Cl5i atoms at 63.2587 (3)°. The Pb atoms have stronger interactions with the chlorine atoms resulting in shorter bond lengths and a wide range of bond lengths from 69.7087 (3)–156.02 (3)°. The indium atoms have weaker interactions and are interstitially located throughout the structure. The weaker interactions of the indium atoms is evident because of the shorter bond lengths and smaller range of bond angles from 63.2587 (3)–144.1653 (3)°. A complete list of bond lengths and bond angles is given in the supporting information.
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3. Database survey
The InPb2Cl5 structure is isostructural with other compounds such as RbPb2Cl5 (Isaenko et al., 2013; Isaenko et al., 2009), KPb2Cl5 (Rowe et al., 2014; Isaenko et al., 2009) and TlPb2Cl5 (Khyzhun et al., 2014). The cell dimensions of the monoclinic InPb2Cl5 cell are compared with the isostructural compounds in Table 2. The cell dimensions for InPb2Cl5 match very closely with TlPb2Cl5. There is no significant difference between the InPb2Cl5 structure and the isostructural structures in Table 2, the small difference is due to the atomic size difference for indium. The indium atom has the smallest atom size, so it is expected to fit tighter into the compared to the other structures, so we see that InPb2Cl5 has the smallest volume. The thallium atom is most comparable to the indium atom size, which is why its cell dimensions are most similar.
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4. Synthesis and crystallization
Stoichiometric amounts of the binary compounds InICl (4g, ThermoFisher Scientific 99.995%, metals basis) and PbIICl2 [3.7278 (5)g, Acros Organics 99%] were mixed in a under an argon environment (<0.1ppm O2 and H2O). The binary compounds were ground together with a mortar and pestle and then loaded into a quartz ampoule. The quartz ampoule was flame sealed under high vacuum (5.5 × 10−5 mbar). The loaded quartz ampoule was heated at 3K min−1 in a vertical furnace to 793K. The ampoule was cooled at 0.5 K min−1 to room temperature. A 1 mm3 piece of the metallic black and grey crystal was separated from the excess yellow PbIICl2 crystals and sent for characterization by powder-XRD and single-crystal XRD.
5. Refinement
The crystallographic data, data collection and structure .
are summarized in Table 3Supporting information
CCDC reference: 2294068
https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989023007892/pk2694sup1.cif
contains datablocks global, I. DOI:Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989023007892/pk2694Isup2.hkl
Cell
APEX2 (Bruker, 2012); data reduction: SAINT (Bruker, 2012); program(s) used to solve structure: SHELXT (Sheldrick, 2015a); program(s) used to refine structure: SHELXL (Sheldrick, 2015b); molecular graphics: CrystalMaker (Palmer, 2014); software used to prepare material for publication: WinGX (Farrugia, 2012) and publCIF (Westrip, 2010).In2Pb4Cl10 | F(000) = 1192 |
Mr = 1412.9 | Dx = 5.297 Mg m−3 |
Monoclinic, P21/c | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å |
Hall symbol: -P 2ybc | Cell parameters from 9997 reflections |
a = 8.9681 (11) Å | θ = 2.3–30.5° |
b = 7.9033 (9) Å | µ = 41.91 mm−1 |
c = 12.4980 (16) Å | T = 298 K |
β = 90.254 (6)° | Transparent square, colourless |
V = 885.82 (19) Å3 | 0.22 × 0.18 × 0.13 mm |
Z = 2 |
Bruker APEXII CCD diffractometer | 2699 independent reflections |
Radiation source: sealed X-ray tube, Incoatec Iµs | 2423 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Graphite monochromator | Rint = 0.051 |
Detector resolution: 7.9 pixels mm-1 | θmax = 30.6°, θmin = 2.3° |
φ and ω scans | h = −12→12 |
Absorption correction: multi-scan (SADABS; Krause et al., 2015) | k = −11→11 |
Tmin = 0.378, Tmax = 0.746 | l = −17→17 |
20682 measured reflections |
Refinement on F2 | 0 constraints |
Least-squares matrix: full | Primary atom site location: structure-invariant direct methods |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.021 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0083P)2 + 1.8133P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
wR(F2) = 0.042 | (Δ/σ)max = 0.002 |
S = 1.08 | Δρmax = 1.22 e Å−3 |
2699 reflections | Δρmin = −1.13 e Å−3 |
74 parameters | Extinction correction: SHELXL-2018/3 (Sheldrick 2015b), Fc*=kFc[1+0.001xFc2λ3/sin(2θ)]-1/4 |
0 restraints | Extinction coefficient: 0.00232 (8) |
Geometry. All esds (except the esd in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell esds are taken into account individually in the estimation of esds in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between esds in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell esds is used for estimating esds involving l.s. planes. |
x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | ||
Cl1 | 0.04109 (12) | 0.67574 (15) | 0.41739 (11) | 0.0316 (3) | |
Cl2 | 0.45758 (11) | 0.66555 (13) | 0.40434 (9) | 0.0226 (2) | |
Cl3 | 0.27835 (14) | 0.65746 (14) | 0.68735 (10) | 0.0304 (3) | |
Cl4 | 0.72918 (12) | 0.68702 (14) | 0.72264 (9) | 0.0252 (2) | |
Cl5 | 0.28105 (12) | 0.45943 (14) | 1.00167 (9) | 0.0232 (2) | |
In1 | 0.98678 (5) | 0.45346 (6) | 0.83468 (4) | 0.04410 (11) | |
Pb1 | 0.24664 (2) | 0.43551 (2) | 0.50647 (2) | 0.02229 (6) | |
Pb2 | 0.49498 (2) | 0.48805 (2) | 0.82509 (2) | 0.02538 (6) |
U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
Cl1 | 0.0194 (5) | 0.0309 (6) | 0.0445 (7) | 0.0009 (4) | 0.0017 (5) | 0.0137 (5) |
Cl2 | 0.0192 (5) | 0.0201 (4) | 0.0285 (6) | −0.0008 (4) | −0.0002 (4) | 0.0059 (4) |
Cl3 | 0.0364 (6) | 0.0283 (5) | 0.0263 (6) | 0.0084 (5) | −0.0081 (5) | −0.0063 (4) |
Cl4 | 0.0259 (5) | 0.0254 (5) | 0.0243 (6) | −0.0027 (4) | 0.0021 (4) | 0.0025 (4) |
Cl5 | 0.0251 (5) | 0.0240 (5) | 0.0205 (5) | 0.0004 (4) | 0.0005 (4) | 0.0009 (4) |
In1 | 0.0418 (2) | 0.0432 (2) | 0.0472 (3) | 0.00874 (18) | −0.00359 (19) | −0.00495 (19) |
Pb1 | 0.01876 (9) | 0.02412 (9) | 0.02399 (10) | −0.00042 (6) | −0.00025 (6) | −0.00142 (6) |
Pb2 | 0.02614 (10) | 0.02526 (9) | 0.02473 (10) | −0.00304 (7) | 0.00037 (7) | 0.00179 (6) |
Cl1—Pb1 | 2.8677 (12) | Cl3—Pb2 | 2.9156 (12) |
Cl1—Pb1i | 2.8912 (11) | Cl4—Pb2 | 2.9236 (11) |
Cl2—Pb1 | 2.9214 (10) | Cl4—Pb1iii | 3.0314 (12) |
Cl2—Pb2ii | 2.9311 (10) | Cl5—Pb2 | 2.9394 (11) |
Cl2—Pb1iii | 2.9817 (11) | Cl5—Pb2iv | 2.9760 (12) |
Cl3—Pb1 | 2.8744 (12) | ||
Pb1—Cl1—Pb1i | 104.12 (4) | Cl2—Pb1—Cl2iii | 75.72 (3) |
Pb1—Cl2—Pb2ii | 143.53 (4) | Cl1—Pb1—Cl4iii | 83.88 (4) |
Pb1—Cl2—Pb1iii | 104.28 (3) | Cl3—Pb1—Cl4iii | 158.52 (3) |
Pb2ii—Cl2—Pb1iii | 105.88 (3) | Cl1i—Pb1—Cl4iii | 106.34 (4) |
Pb1—Cl3—Pb2 | 104.33 (4) | Cl2—Pb1—Cl4iii | 74.75 (3) |
Pb2—Cl4—Pb1iii | 107.24 (4) | Cl2iii—Pb1—Cl4iii | 101.55 (3) |
Pb2—Cl5—Pb2iv | 95.44 (3) | Cl3—Pb2—Cl4 | 88.42 (4) |
Cl1—Pb1—Cl3 | 87.85 (4) | Cl3—Pb2—Cl2v | 72.16 (3) |
Cl1—Pb1—Cl1i | 75.88 (4) | Cl4—Pb2—Cl2v | 74.28 (3) |
Cl3—Pb1—Cl1i | 90.69 (4) | Cl3—Pb2—Cl5 | 92.48 (3) |
Cl1—Pb1—Cl2 | 80.49 (3) | Cl4—Pb2—Cl5 | 147.44 (3) |
Cl3—Pb1—Cl2 | 84.37 (4) | Cl2v—Pb2—Cl5 | 75.06 (3) |
Cl1i—Pb1—Cl2 | 156.02 (3) | Cl3—Pb2—Cl5iv | 144.23 (3) |
Cl1—Pb1—Cl2iii | 153.09 (3) | Cl4—Pb2—Cl5iv | 76.10 (3) |
Cl3—Pb1—Cl2iii | 77.57 (3) | Cl2v—Pb2—Cl5iv | 72.65 (3) |
Cl1i—Pb1—Cl2iii | 126.11 (3) | Cl5—Pb2—Cl5iv | 84.56 (3) |
Symmetry codes: (i) −x, −y+1, −z+1; (ii) x, −y+3/2, z−1/2; (iii) −x+1, −y+1, −z+1; (iv) −x+1, −y+1, −z+2; (v) x, −y+3/2, z+1/2. |
Bond | Distance |
Cl1—Pb1 | 2.8677 (12) |
Cl2—Pb1 | 2.9214 (10) |
Cl3—Pb1 | 2.8744 (12) |
Cl3—Pb2 | 2.9156 (12) |
Cl4—Pb2 | 2.9236 (11) |
Cl5—Pb2 | 2.9760 (12) |
Compound | a (Å) | b (Å) | c (Å) | β (°) | Volume (Å3) |
InPb2Cl5 | 8.9681 (11) | 7.9033 (9) | 12.4980 (16) | 90.254 (6) | 885.82 (19) |
TlPb2Cl5 | 8.9561 | 7.9204 | 12.4908 | 90.073 | 886.0 |
RbPb2Cl5 | 8.9900 | 7.9963 | 12.541 | 90.20 | 901.5 |
KPb2Cl5 | 8.864 | 7.932 | 12.491 | 90.153 | 878.2 |
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Queen's University and the Arthur B. Macdonald Institute for funding.
Funding information
Funding for this research was provided by: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Canada Foundation for Innovation; Canada First Research Excellence Fund.
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