Litcius/Paper detail

Elastic Molecular Crystals: Their Deformation-Induced Reversible Unit Cell Changes with Specific Poisson Effect

Shotaro Hayashi

2022Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Detailed investigation of macroscopic deformation and nanoscopic structural changes in flexible organic crystals poses challenges for investigators. Herein, applied stress and subsequent relaxation of elastic organic crystals resulted in reversible macroscopic crystal deformation. X-ray diffraction with a curved stage-jig revealed reversible nanoscopic structural unit cell changes in the crystal structure under the bending stress and relaxation. The crystal lattice changed quantitatively under the applied macroscopic stress-strain (%). This method enables quantitative monitoring of the dynamic nanoscopic structural changes in detail associated with crystal deformation through the use of standard laboratory X-ray diffraction analysis. Importantly, the developed method offers a way of quantitatively measuring reversible structural changes, without synchrotron X-ray analysis. Moreover, the analysis derives Poisson’s ratio, i.e., the ratio of the change in the width per unit width of materials. It is important in materials science, and normally has a positive value in the range of 0.2–0.5. However, the crystals show not only the “Poisson effect” but also the unusual “negative Poisson effect”. This novel approach for investigation generates unprecedented opportunities for understanding dynamic nano-structural unit cell changes in flexible organic crystals.

Topics & Concepts

Nanoscopic scaleChemistryDeformation (meteorology)SynchrotronSingle crystalCrystallographyCrystal (programming language)Poisson's ratioCrystal structureStress relaxationChemical physicsRelaxation (psychology)BendingPoisson distributionDiffractionMaterials scienceNanotechnologyComposite materialOpticsCreepPhysicsSocial psychologyComputer scienceProgramming languageStatisticsMathematicsPsychologyLuminescence and Fluorescent MaterialsOrganic Electronics and PhotovoltaicsConducting polymers and applications