Diverse polymorphism in Ruddlesden-Popper chalcogenides
P. Kayastha,
E. Fransson,
P. Erhart,
and
L. D. Whalley
arXiv:2507.11300
doi: 10.48550/arXiv.2507.11300
zenodo: 15829577
(associated data)
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Ruddlesden-Popper (RP) chalcogenides are stable, non-toxic candidates for optoelectronic or thermoelectric applications. The structural diversity of RP oxides is already exploited to tune properties or achieve more advanced functionalities like multiferroicity, however, little is known about the structural evolution of RP chalcogenides. In this work, we develop a high-accuracy machine-learned interatomic potential to run large-scale molecular dynamics simulations on Ban+1ZrnS3n+1 for n=1 to n=6. We predict new polymorphs for each n-value, calculate their corresponding phase transition temperatures, and validate our approach through comparison to published experimental results. We find that the n=1 phase exhibits negative thermal expansion, that n=1 and n=3 undergo unusual ascending symmetry breaking, and that phases with n≥ 4 form layer-dependent tilt patterns previously unreported for inorganic RP materials. This unique behaviour results from competition between octahedral rotations and rumpling at the rocksalt interface, and suggests new strategies for accessing advanced functionalities.