New Pressure-Induced Polymorphic Transitions of Anhydrous Magnesium Sulfate
A. Benmakhlouf, D. Errandonea, M. Bouchenafa, S. Maabed, A., Bouhemadou, A. Bentabet

TL;DR
This study uses DFT calculations to explore pressure-induced polymorphic transitions in magnesium sulfate, predicting new phases and their structural, mechanical, and electronic properties, with implications for metastability and phase reversibility.
Contribution
It is the first to predict new MgSO4 polymorphs under pressure, characterize their structures, and analyze their electronic properties using first-principles calculations.
Findings
Beta MgSO4 is thermodynamically unstable compared to alpha MgSO4.
Predicted phase transitions at 17.5 GPa and 35 GPa to new polymorphs delta and epsilon.
New polymorphs have magnesium in eightfold coordination and are potentially recoverable at ambient conditions.
Abstract
The effects of pressure on the crystal structure of the three known polymorphs of magnesium sulfate have been theoretically study by means of DFT calculations up to 45 GPa. We determined that at ambient conditions gamma MgSO4 is an unstable polymorph, which decompose into MgO and SO3, and that the response of the other two polymorphs to hydrostatic pressure is non isotropic. Additionally we found that at all pressures beta MgSO4 has a largest enthalpy than alpha MgSO4. This indicates that beta MgSO4 is thermodynamically unstable versus alpha MgSO4 and predicts the occurrence of a beta alpha phase transition under moderate compression. Our calculations also predict the existence under pressure of additional phase transitions to two new polymorphs of MgSO4, which we named as delta MgSO4 and epsilon MgSO4. The alpha delta transition is predicted to occur at 17.5 GPa, and the delta epsilon…
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