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Published May 28, 2011 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

The magnetic and electronic structure of vanadyl pyrophosphate from density functional theory

Abstract

We have studied the magnetic structure of the high symmetry vanadyl pyrophosphate ((VO)_(2)P_(2)O)7, VOPO), focusing on the spin exchange couplings, using density functional theory (B3LYP) with the full three-dimensional periodicity. VOPO involves four distinct spin couplings: two larger couplings exist along the chain direction (a-axis), which we predict to be antiferromagnetic, J_(OPO) = −156.8 K and J_O = −68.6 K, and two weaker couplings appear along the c (between two layers) and b directions (between two chains in the same layer), which we calculate to be ferromagnetic, J_layer = 19.2 K and J_chain = 2.8 K. Based on the local density of states and the response of spin couplings to varying the cell parameter a, we found that J_(OPO) originates from a super-exchange interaction through the bridging –O–P–O– unit. In contrast, J_O results from a direct overlap of 3d_(x^2 − y^2) orbitals on two vanadium atoms in the same V_(2)O_8 motif, making it very sensitive to structural fluctuations. Based on the variations in V–O bond length as a function of strain along a, we found that the V–O bonds of V–(OPO)_(2)–V are covalent and rigid, whereas the bonds of V–(O)_(2)–V are fragile and dative. These distinctions suggest that compression along the a-axis would have a dramatic impact on J_O, changing the magnetic structure and spin gap of VOPO. This result also suggests that assuming J_O to be a constant over the range of 2–300 K whilst fitting couplings to the experimental magnetic susceptibility is an invalid method. Regarding its role as a catalyst, the bonding pattern suggests that O_2 can penetrate beyond the top layers of the VOPO surface, converting multiple V atoms from the +4 to +5 oxidation state, which seems crucial to explain the deep oxidation of n-butane to maleic anhydride.

Additional Information

© 2011 the Owner Societies. Received 3rd December 2010, Accepted 13th March 2011. First published on the web 18 Apr 2011. This work was supported by the Center for Catalytic Hydrocarbon Functionalization, an Energy Frontier Research Center, DOE DE-SC0001298.

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Published - Cheng2011p13574Physical_chemistry_chemical_physics_PCCP.pdf

Supplemental Material - c0cp02777d.pdf

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