Dominique Laniel,Florian Trybel,Yuqing Yin,Timofey Fedotenko,Saiana Khandarkhaeva,Andrey Aslandukov,Georgios Aprilis,Alexei I. Abrikosov,Talha Bin Masood,Carlotta Giacobbe,Eleanor Lawrence Bright,Konstantin Glazyrin,Michael Hanfland,Jonathan P. Wright,Ingrid Hotz,Igor A. Abrikosov,Leonid Dubrovinsky,Natalia Dubrovinskaia
The recent high-pressure synthesis of pentazolates and the subsequent stabilization of the aromatic [N5]- anion at atmospheric pressure have had an immense impact on nitrogen chemistry. Other aromatic nitrogen species have also been actively sought, including the hexaazabenzene N6 ring. Although a variety of configurations and geometries have been proposed based on ab initio calculations, one that stands out as a likely candidate is the aromatic hexazine anion [N6]4-. Here we present the synthesis of this species, realized in the high-pressure potassium nitrogen compound K9N56 formed at high pressures (46 and 61 GPa) and high temperature (estimated to be above 2,000 K) by direct reaction between nitrogen and KN3 in a laser-heated diamond anvil cell. The complex structure of K9N56-composed of 520 atoms per unit cell-was solved based on synchrotron single-crystal X-ray diffraction and corroborated by density functional theory calculations. The observed hexazine anion [N6]4- is planar and proposed to be aromatic.