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posted by janrinok on Wednesday August 14 2019, @06:11PM   Printer-friendly
from the feeling-the-pressure dept.

The periodic table has been a vital foundational tool for material research since it was first created 150 years ago. Now, Martin Rahm from Chalmers University of Technology presents a new article which adds an entirely new dimension to the table, offering a new set of principles for material research. The article is published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

The study maps how both the electronegativity and the electron configuration of elements change under pressure. These findings offer materials researchers an entirely new set of tools. Primarily, it means it is now possible to make quick predictions about how certain elements will behave at different pressures, without requiring experimental testing or computationally expensive quantum mechanical calculations.

"Currently, searching for those interesting compounds which appear at high pressure requires a large investment of time and resources, both computationally and experimentally. As a consequence, only a tiny fraction of all possible compounds has been investigated. The work we are presenting can act as a guide to help explain what to look for and which compounds to expect when materials are placed under high pressure," says Martin Rahm, Assistant Professor in Chemistry at Chalmers, who led the study.

At high pressures the properties of atoms can change radically. The new study shows how the electron configuration and electronegativity of atoms change as pressure increases. Electron configuration is fundamental to the structure of the periodic table. It determines which group in the system different elements belong to. Electronegativity is also a central concept to chemistry and can be viewed as a third dimension of the periodic table. It indicates how strongly different atoms attract electrons. Together, electron configuration and electronegativity are important for understanding how atoms react with one another to form different substances. At high pressure, atoms which normally do not combine can create new, never before seen compounds with unique properties. Such materials can inspire researchers to try other methods for creating them under more normal conditions, and give us new insight into how our world works.

"At high pressure, extremely fascinating chemical structures with unusual qualities can arise, and reactions that are impossible under normal conditions can occur. A lot of what we as chemists know about elements' properties under ambient conditions simply doesn't hold true any longer. You can basically take a lot of your chemistry education and throw it out the window! In the dimension of pressure there is an unbelievable number of new combinations of atoms to investigate" says Martin Rahm.

A well-known example of what can happen at high pressure is how diamonds can be formed from graphite. Another example is polymerisation of nitrogen gas, where nitrogen atoms are forced together to bond in a three-dimensional network. These two high-pressure materials are very unlike one another. Whereas carbon retains its diamond structure, polymerised nitrogen is unstable and reverts back to gas form when the pressure is released. If the polymer structure of nitrogen could be maintained at normal pressures, it would without doubt be the most energy dense chemical compound on Earth.

Currently, several research groups use high pressures to create superconductors—materials which can conduct electricity without resistance. Some of these high-pressure superconductors function close to room temperature. If such a material could be made to work at normal pressure, it would be revolutionary, enabling, for example, lossless power transfer and cheaper magnetic levitation.

[...] Only some materials that form at high pressure retain their structure and properties when returned to ambient pressure.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 14 2019, @06:33PM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 14 2019, @06:33PM (#880432)

    Where's the draft table? If they think a high-pressure variation of the periodic table is a useful tool, they should at least have devised a rough draft. Otherwise, the patterns may not even be table-able. (Maybe a Kline hexadihedron or something instead.)

  • (Score: 4, Funny) by DannyB on Wednesday August 14 2019, @08:46PM (2 children)

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday August 14 2019, @08:46PM (#880520) Journal

    If the draft table is missing, other tables can work in a pinch if you have a suitable T-square.

    If you're planning, as the article suggests, Rewriting The Periodic Table At High Pressure, it would be better to do so in a relaxed environment without the pressure. Even more true if rewriting the laws of physics, or rewriting history. A drafting table is not really needed.

    > Kline hexadihedron

    I would like a table that is only written properly on a Mobius strip.

    --
    The lower I set my standards the more accomplishments I have.
    • (Score: 2) by AthanasiusKircher on Friday August 16 2019, @12:09AM (1 child)

      by AthanasiusKircher (5291) on Friday August 16 2019, @12:09AM (#880783) Journal

      A drafting table is not really needed.

      Yes, but a drafty table might be useful in relieving the pressure!

      I would like a table that is only written properly on a Mobius strip.

      Now, that's a rather one-sided opinion, isn't it?!

      • (Score: 2) by DannyB on Friday August 16 2019, @02:26PM

        by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Friday August 16 2019, @02:26PM (#881084) Journal

        If Exam Test papers were a Mobius strip, then imagine what happens when the instructor says:

        Turn Your Papers Over !

        --
        The lower I set my standards the more accomplishments I have.