Bipolaron Formation in Icosahedral and Octahedral Borides

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Abstract

Singlet small bipolarons, observed in boron carbides, may be associated with paired holes in the states that kind the atoms of boron-rich polyhedra together. Such "internal" bonding electrons are well approximated as being confined to the surface of the sphere that circumscribes the polyhedron. These bonding states form a succession of levels of orbital angular moment l with 2(2l + 1)-fold degeneracy. Valence bands are "filled", yielding insulating behavior, when the lowest crystal-field-split sub-bands are filled. By deforming the polyhedron, singlet hole pairs, produced by removing a pair of electrons from "filled" internal bonding states. can be stabilized. Our microscopic treatment finds carrier-induced softening, absent in standard as hoc models. This softening facilitates bipolaron formation and accounts for the anomalously large thermoelectric powers observed from bipolarons in boron carbides.

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Emin, D., Evans, D. G., & Mccready, S. S. (1998). Bipolaron Formation in Icosahedral and Octahedral Borides. Physica Status Solidi (B) Basic Research, 205(1), 311–313. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1521-3951(199801)205:1<311::AID-PSSB311>3.0.CO;2-N

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