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Giant Optical Anisotropy in a Covalent Molybdenum Tellurite via Oxyanion Polymerization

  • Tianhui Wu
  • , Xingxing Jiang
  • , Kaining Duanmu
  • , Chao Wu*
  • , Zheshuai Lin
  • , Zhipeng Huang
  • , Mark G. Humphrey
  • , Chi Zhang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    35 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Large birefringence is a crucial but hard-to-achieve optical parameter that is a necessity for birefringent crystals in practical applications involving modulation of the polarization of light in modern opto-electronic areas. Herein, an oxyanion polymerization strategy that involves the combination of two different types of second-order Jahn-Teller distorted units is employed to realize giant anisotropy in a covalent molybdenum tellurite. Mo(H2O)Te2O7 (MTO) exhibits a record birefringence value for an inorganic UV-transparent oxide crystalline material of 0.528 @ 546 nm, which is also significantly larger than those of all commercial birefringent crystals. MTO has a UV absorption edge of 366 nm and displays a strong powder second-harmonic generation response of 5.4 times that of KH2PO4. The dominant roles of the condensed polytellurite oxyanions [Te8O20]8- in combination with the [MoO6]6- polyhedra in achieving the giant birefringence in MTO are clarified by structural analysis and first-principles calculations. The results suggest that polymerization of polarizability-anisotropic oxyanions may unlock the promise of birefringent crystals with exceptional birefringence.A covalent molybdenum tellurite, Mo(H2O)Te2O7, which exhibits significantly large birefringence of exp. 0.528 @ 546 nm-being the largest value for inorganic UV-transparent oxides, is successfully constructed by an oxyanion polymerization strategy. image
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number2306670
    Number of pages8
    JournalAdvanced Science
    Volume11
    Issue number12
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 27 Mar 2024

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