Litcius/Paper detail

We are never ever getting (back to) ideal symmetry: structure and luminescence in a ten-coordinated europium( <scp>iii</scp> ) sulfate crystal

Maria Storm Thomsen, Andy S. Anker, Laura Kacenauskaite, Thomas Just Sørensen

2022Dalton Transactions21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Our theoretical treatment of electronic structures in coordination complexes often rests on assumptions of symmetry. Experiments rarely provide fully symmetric systems to study. In solutions, fluctuations in solvation, variations in conformations, and even changes in constitution occur and complicate the picture. In crystals, lattice distortion, energy transfer, and phonon quenching play a role, but we are able to identify distinct symmetries. Yet the question remains: How is the real symmetry in a crystal compared to ideal symmetries?

Topics & Concepts

EuropiumSymmetry (geometry)Homogeneous spaceLuminescenceIdeal (ethics)Lattice (music)Crystal (programming language)Crystal structurePhononCrystallographySolvationCondensed matter physicsChemical physicsPhysicsChemistryMaterials scienceTheoretical physicsQuantum mechanicsMoleculeMathematicsLawComputer scienceGeometryOpticsPolitical scienceProgramming languageAcousticsMagnetism in coordination complexesLanthanide and Transition Metal ComplexesMetal-Organic Frameworks: Synthesis and Applications