Prediction of an alternative route to polymeric carbon dioxide: A metastable energetic material
Reetam Paul, Jonathan C. Crowhurst, Stanimir A. Bonev

TL;DR
This study predicts a new, metastable polymeric phase formed from a CO+O2 mixture at significantly lower pressures than CO2, which could be recovered at ambient conditions and serve as an energetic material.
Contribution
It introduces a novel pathway for polymerizing carbon monoxide and oxygen at lower pressures, resulting in a metastable energetic material with potential recoverability.
Findings
Polymerization occurs at ~7 GPa with CO+O2, much lower than CO2.
The resulting polymer is metastable and potentially recoverable at ambient conditions.
The new phase is an energetic material with unique properties.
Abstract
The use of pressure to obtain new materials that can be recovered under ambient conditions is a central problem in high-pressure physics. Despite decades of research, this goal has only been achieved in the laboratory for a few notable examples, such as diamond and cubic boron nitride. An area of significant interest is the transformation under compression of light-element molecular compounds to extended covalent-bonded (polymeric) solids. Among them, CO has been extensively studied because of its status as a prototypical simple molecular system with a rich phase diagram and due to its fundamental role in Earth's physics and chemistry. One of its polymeric crystalline phases, accessible at extreme pressures and temperatures, has been recently quenched to ambient pressure, but below room temperature. Here we report ab initio calculations predicting that isothermal compression of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEnergetic Materials and Combustion · Rocket and propulsion systems research · Spacecraft Design and Technology
