218 research outputs found
Concomitant polymorphism and the martensitic-like transformation of an organic crystal.
Crystalline polymorphism is a phenomenon that occurs in many molecular solids, resulting in a diverse range of possible bulk structures. Temperature and pressure can often be used to thermodynamically control which crystal form is preferred, and the associated transitions between polymorphic phases are often discontinuous and complete. N-Methyl-4-carboxypyridinium chloride is a solid that undergoes an apparent continuous temperature-dependent phase transition from an orthorhombic to a monoclinic polymorph. However, a hybrid characterization approach using single-crystal X-ray diffraction, terahertz time-domain spectroscopy, and solid-state density functional theory reveals the transformation to be actually a slowly changing ratio of the two discrete polymorphic forms. The potential energy surface of this process can be directly accessed using terahertz radiation, and the data show that a very low barrier (43.3 J mol-1) exists along the polymorph transformation coordinate
Design of compensated ferrimagnetic Heusler alloys for giant tunable exchange bias
The discovery of materials with improved functionality can be accelerated by
rational material design. Heusler compounds with tunable magnetic sublattices
allow to implement this concept to achieve novel magnetic properties. Here, we
have designed a family of Heusler alloys with a compensated ferrimagnetic
state. In the vicinity of the compensation composition in Mn-Pt-Ga, a giant
exchange bias (EB) of more than 3 T and a similarly large coercivity are
established. The large exchange anisotropy originates from the exchange
interaction between the compensated host and ferrimagnetic clusters that arise
from intrinsic anti-site disorder. We demonstrate the applicability of our
design concept on a second material, Mn-Fe-Ga, with a magnetic transition above
room temperature, exemplifying the universality of the concept and the
feasibility of room-temperature applications. Our study points to a new
direction for novel magneto-electronic devices. At the same time it suggests a
new route for realizing rare-earth free exchange-biased hard magnets, where the
second quadrant magnetization can be stabilized by the exchange bias.Comment: Four figure
Quantification of cation-anion interactions in crystalline monopotassium and monosodium glutamate salts.
Crystalline salt compounds composed of metal cations and organic anions are becoming increasingly popular in a number of fields, including the pharmaceutical and food industries, where such formulations can lead to increased product solubility. The origins of these effects are often in the interactions between the individual components in the crystals, and understanding these forces is paramount for the design and utilisation of such materials. Monosodium glutamate monohydrate and monopotassium glutamate monohydrate are two solids that form significantly different structures with correspondingly dissimilar dynamics, while their chemistry only differs in cation identity. Crystals of each were characterised experimentally with single-crystal X-ray diffraction and terahertz time-domain spectroscopy and theoretically using solid-state density functional theory simulations, in order to explain the observed differences in their bulk properties. Specifically, crystal orbital overlap and Hamiltonian population analyses were performed to examine the role that the individual interactions between the cation and anion played in the solid-state structures and the overall energetic profiles of these materials
Resolving the Origins of Crystalline Anharmonicity Using Terahertz Time-Domain Spectroscopy and ab Initio Simulations.
Anharmonicity has been shown to be an important piece of the fundamental framework that dictates numerous observable phenomena. In particular, anharmonicity is the driving force of vibrational relaxation processes, mechanisms that are integral to the proper function of numerous chemical processes. However, elucidating its origins has proven difficult due to experimental and theoretical challenges, specifically related to separating the anharmonic contributions from other unrelated effects. While no one technique is particularly suited for providing a complete picture of anharmonicity, by combining multiple complementary methods such a characterization can be made. In this study the role of individual atomic interactions on the anharmonic properties of crystalline purine, the building block of many DNA and RNA nucleobases, is studied by experimental terahertz time-domain spectroscopy and first-principles density functional theory (DFT) and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations (AIMD). In particular, the detailed vibrational information provided by the DFT calculations is used to interpret the atomic origins of anharmonic-related effects as determined by the AIMD calculations, which are in good agreement with the experimental data. The results highlight that anharmonicity is especially pronounced in the intermolecular interactions, particularly along the amine hydrogen bond coordinate, and yields valuable insight into what is similarly observed complex biosystems and crystalline solids.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/N022769/1
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Uncovering the Connection Between Low-Frequency Dynamics and Phase Transformation Phenomena in Molecular Solids.
The low-frequency motions of molecules in the condensed phase have been shown to be vital to a large number of physical properties and processes. However, in the case of disordered systems, it is often difficult to elucidate the atomic-level details surrounding these phenomena. In this work, we have performed an extensive experimental and computational study on the molecular solid camphor, which exhibits a rich and complex structure-dynamics relationship, and undergoes an order-disorder transition near ambient conditions. The combination of x-ray diffraction, variable temperature and pressure terahertz time-domain spectroscopy, ab initio molecular dynamics, and periodic density functional theory calculations enables a complete picture of the phase transition to be obtained, inclusive of mechanistic, structural, and thermodynamic phenomena. Additionally, the low-frequency vibrations of a disordered solid are characterized for the first time with atomic-level precision, uncovering a clear link between such motions and the phase transformation. Overall, this combination of methods allows for significant details to be obtained for disordered solids and the associated transformations, providing a framework that can be directly applied for a wide range of similar systems
Mesoscopic structuring and dynamics of alcohol/water solutions probed by terahertz time-domain spectroscopy and pulsed field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance.
Terahertz and PFG-NMR techniques are used to explore transitions in the structuring of binary alcohol/water mixtures. Three critical alcohol mole fractions (x1, x2, x3) are identified: methanol (10, 30, 70 mol %), ethanol (7, 15, 60 mol %), 1-propanol (2, 10, 50 mol %), and 2-propanol (2, 10, 50 mol %). Above compositions of x1 no isolated alcohol molecules exist, and below x1 the formation of large hydration shells around the hydrophobic moieties of the alcohol is favored. The maximum number of water molecules, N0, in the hydration shell surrounding a single alcohol molecule increases with the length of the carbon chain of the alcohol. At x2 the greatest nonideality of the liquid structure exists with the formation of extended hydrogen bonded networks between alcohol and water molecules. The terahertz data show the maximum absorption relative to that predicted for an ideal mixture at that composition, while the PFG-NMR data exhibit a minimum in the alkyl chain self-diffusivity at x2, showing that the alcohol has reached a minimum in diffusion when this extended alcohol-water network has reached the highest degree of structuring. At x3 an equivalence of the alkyl and alcohol hydroxyl diffusion coefficients is determined by PFG-NMR, suggesting that the molecular mobility of the alcohol molecules becomes independent of that of the water molecules.This is the final published version. It's also available from the Journal of Physical Chemistry B here: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jp502799x
Glass-Transition Temperature of the β-Relaxation as the Major Predictive Parameter for Recrystallization of Neat Amorphous Drugs.
Recrystallization of amorphous drugs is currently limiting the simple approach to improve solubility and bioavailability of poorly water-soluble drugs by amorphization of a crystalline form of the drug. In view of this, molecular mobility, α-relaxation and β-relaxation processes with the associated transition temperatures Tgα and Tgβ, was investigated using dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA). The correlation between the transition temperatures and the onset of recrystallization for nine amorphous drugs, stored under dry conditions at a temperature of 296 K, was determined. From the results obtained, Tgα does not correlate with the onset of recrystallization under the experimental storage conditions. However, a clear correlation between Tgβ and the onset of recrystallization was observed. It is shown that at storage temperature below Tgβ, amorphous nifedipine retains its amorphous form. On the basis of the correlation, an empirical correlation is proposed for predicting the onset of recrystallization for drugs stored at 0% RH and 296 K
Symmetry and correlation effects on band structure explain the anomalous transport properties of (111) LaAlO/SrTiO
The interface between the two insulating oxides SrTiO and LaAlO gives
rise to a two-dimensional electron system with intriguing transport phenomena,
including superconductivity, which are controllable by a gate. Previous
measurements on the (001) interface have shown that the superconducting
critical temperature, the Hall density, and the frequency of quantum
oscillations, vary nonmonotonically and in a correlated fashion with the gate
voltage. In this paper we experimentally demonstrate that the (111) interface
features a qualitatively distinct behavior, in which the frequency of
Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations changes monotonically, while the variation of
other properties is nonmonotonic albeit uncorrelated. We develop a theoretical
model, incorporating the different symmetries of these interfaces as well as
electronic-correlation-induced band competition. We show that the latter
dominates at (001), leading to similar nonmonotonicity in all observables,
while the former is more important at (111), giving rise to highly curved Fermi
contours, and accounting for all its anomalous transport measurements.Comment: 6+7 pages, 4+6 figures, Published Versio
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