Superionic State Discovered in Ternary Hypervalent Silicon Hydrides via Sodium inside the Earth
Abstract
Superionic states are phases of matters that can simultaneously exhibit some of the properties of a fluid and of a solid. Superionic states of ice, H3O, He-H2O or He-NH3 compounds have been reported in previous works. Silicon, sodium, and hydrogen are abundant elements inside the earth. Here, we use ab initio calculations to show that, at extreme conditions inside the earth, Na, Si, and H can form many hypervalent compounds that some of them can exist every close to ambient pressure, and surprisingly a previously unknown type of superionic state of P3m1 - Na2SiH6 can form as well. Our work focused on new superionic state of Na2SiH6, and the results also reveal several different hypervalent Si-H anions discovered, which are different from individual SiH5\,- and octahedral SiH6\,2- in previous research of ternary alkali hypervalent silicon hydrides. Our work provides some advice on further investigations on potential ternary hydrides inside the earth.