Multidimensional Rietveld refinement of high-pressure neutron diffraction data of PbNCN

J Appl Crystallogr. 2024 Sep 5;57(Pt 5):1436-1445. doi: 10.1107/S1600576724007635. eCollection 2024 Oct 1.

Abstract

High-pressure neutron powder diffraction data from PbNCN were collected on the high-pressure diffraction beamline SNAP located at the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) of Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Tennessee, USA). The diffraction data were analyzed using the novel method of multidimensional (two dimensions for now, potentially more in the future) Rietveld refinement and, for comparison, employing the conventional Rietveld method. To achieve two-dimensional analysis, a detailed description of the SNAP instrument characteristics was created, serving as an instrument parameter file, and then yielding both cell and spatial parameters as refined under pressure for the first time for solid-state cyanamides/carbodi-imides. The bulk modulus B 0 = 25.1 (15) GPa and its derivative B'0 = 11.1 (8) were extracted for PbNCN following the Vinet equation of state. Surprisingly, an internal transition was observed beyond 2.0 (2) GPa, resulting from switching the bond multiplicities (and bending direction) of the NCN2- complex anion. The results were corroborated using electronic structure calculation from first principles, highlighting both local structural and chemical bonding details.

Keywords: SNAP beamline; angular dispersion; high-pressure studies; lead cyanamide; multidimensional Rietveld refinement; neutron diffraction; wavelength dispersion.

Grants and funding

A portion of this research used resources at the Spallation Neutron Source, a DOE Office of Science User Facility operated by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. We also thank the Jülich–Aachen Research Alliance (JARA) and the RWTH Aachen University IT Center for having provided CPU time under project jara0033. This work was supported by the consortium DAPHNE4NFDI in the context of the work of the NFDI e.V. The consortium is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation, project No. 460248799). Financial support by the German Federal Ministry of Research and Education (BMBF) for the POWTEX project (grant Nos. 05K19PA1 and 05K22PA2) is gratefully acknowledged.