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A high-pressure form of sulfuric acid monohydrate as determined by X-ray and neutron diffraction
Authors:Francesca P.A. Fabbiani  Alice Dawson  William G. Marshall
Affiliation:a School of Chemistry and Centre for Science at Extreme Conditions, The University of Edinburgh, King’s Buildings, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JJ, Scotland, UK
b Diamond Light Source Ltd, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Diamond House, Chilton, Didcot OX11 0DE, UK
c ISIS Pulsed Neutron and Muon Facility, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot OX11 0QX, UK
Abstract:Two high-pressure polymorphs of sulfuric acid monohydrate (oxonium hydrogensulfate) have been obtained at ambient temperature by crystallisation at high pressure from the liquid at 1.3 GPa (form III) and by direct compression of the ambient-pressure form I first to 1.26 GPa (form II) and then to 1.72 GPa (form III). The structure of form III was solved by single crystal X-ray diffraction and this structure was used as the basis for the refinement of hydrogen positions using high-pressure neutron powder diffraction data. Form III crystallises in the orthorhombic crystal system at 1.97 GPa, and features parallel chains of hydrogensulfate ions linked by oxonium ions to form a three-dimensional hydrogen-bonded network. On further compression to 3.05 GPa, the direction of maximum compressibility is found to be along the a-axis and is associated with the shortening of a hydrogen bond between a hydrogensulfate ion and an oxonium ion. The structure of form II remains elusive although at ambient temperature it is stable (or metastable) at pressures as low as 0.42 GPa, perhaps indicating that it could be recoverable to ambient-pressure at low temperature.
Keywords:Sulfuric acid   Hydrate   High-pressure   Neutron diffraction   X-ray diffraction
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