Jj. Dong et al., Investigation of hardness in tetrahedrally bonded nonmolecular CO2 solids by density-functional theory, PHYS REV B, 62(22), 2000, pp. 14685-14689
Stability and compressibility of several nonmolecular (polymeric) COP solid
s in structures analogous to those of SiO2 have been investigated with ab i
nitio density-functional theory. Contrary to the recent, experimental repor
ts of a "superhard" high-pressure tridymite form of CO2, we find that metas
table tetrahedrally bonded CO2 polymorphs, such as tridymite, cristobalite,
and quartz, are relatively compressible, with bulk moduli K of only 1/2 to
1/3 of the reported experimental value. In addition, theory finds that the
experimentally reported lattice parameters are not stable fur CO2 P2(1)2(1
)2(1) tridymite. Finally, none of the calculated x-ray spectra of the fully
relaxed structures of CO2 polymorphs obtained from theory agrees with the
experiments. The significant discrepancy between experiments and density-fu
nctional theory suggests that further studies on nonmolecular CO2 solids ar
e necessary, and that the assumptions that density-functional theory can de
scribe these materials correctly, or that the framework of the new nonmolec
ular CO2 solids contains only CO4 tetrahedra, must be re-examined.