ThCr2Si2: giving it the old 1-2-2
What does it look like?
What is it?
Thorium chromium silicide is the prototypical structure for a whole range of materials of the form RT2X2. The structure is tetragonal. R is a Group 1, Group 2 or rare earth element, shown here in green. T is a transition metal (coloured red). X is a group 14 or 15 element (shown in blue).
That gives a lot of combinations.
What's more, there's nothing that says each component has to be a single element. For example, the X is commonly Si or Ge, but it could be any mix of the two.
Ternary compounds such as this provide huge scope for exploration. For example, R and T can both have magnetic moments which interact strongly with each other, so the magnetic properties of this class of materials can be highly intricate.
Where does the structure come from?
This structure was first published as: Ban, Z.; and Sikirica, M. Acta Crystallographica 18 (1965) p594-p599
Reference: Andrej Szytula and Janusz Leciejewicz: CRC Handbook of Crystal Structures and Magnetic Properties of Rare Earth Intermetallics