Nature Materials, Vol.14, No.2, 169-173, 2015
Synthesis of an open-framework allotrope of silicon
Silicon is ubiquitous in contemporary technology. The most stable form of silicon at ambient conditions takes on the structure of diamond (cF8, d-Si) and is an indirect bandgap semiconductor, which prevents it from being considered as a next-generation platform for semiconductor technologies(1-4). Here, we report the formation of a new orthorhombic allotrope of silicon, Si-24, using a novel two-step synthesis methodology. First, a Na4Si24 precursor was synthesized at high pressure(5); second, sodium was removed from the precursor by a thermal 'degassing' process. The Cmcm structure of Si-24, which has 24 Si atoms per unit cell (oC24), contains open channels along the crystallographic a-axis that are formed from six- and eight-membered sp(3) silicon rings. This new allotrope possesses a quasidirect bandgap near 1.3 eV. Our combined experimental/theoretical study expands the known allotropy for element fourteen and the unique high-pressure precursor synthesis methodology demonstrates the potential for new materials with desirable properties.