5 research outputs found
Crystal Chiral Symmetry Breaking: A Self-Seed Inducing Effect Controlled by Kinetics
We have studied the mechanism of crystal chiral symmetry
breaking
through the competition between two enantiomorphs using the inducing
nucleation of two seeds, one of each chirality, under an ultrasonic
field. A seed, introduced into its supersaturated solution
earlier only 1–2 min than another seed with opposite handedness,
can dominate the chirality of final products, and when two seeds with
opposite handedness were simultaneously introduced into the solution,
the ee's of the final products were closely related to the proportion
of the clusters of two enantiomorphs. Our result suggests that the
realization of the crystal chiral symmetry breaking under an ultrasonic
field is via a self-seed inducing effect controlled by kinetics, in
particular, depending on the difference between the rate of secondary
nucleation induced by a primary nucleus and the rate of primary nucleation,
while a primary nucleus can make the solute around it pile up in one
way of the same handedness as it and rapidly coalesce on the clusters
of the same handedness as it, leading to a large secondary nucleation
rate