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1.
Inorg Chem ; 63(8): 3781-3794, 2024 Feb 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38346445

RESUMO

Materials with an extreme lattice thermal conductivity (κl) are indispensable for thermal energy management applications. Layered materials provide an avenue for designing such functional materials due to their intrinsic bonding heterogeneity. Therefore, a microscopic understanding of the crystal structure, bonding, anharmonic lattice dynamics, and phonon transport properties is critically important for layered materials. Alkaline-earth halofluorides exhibit anisotropy from their layered crystal structure, which is strongly determined by axial bond(s), and it is attributed to the large axial ratio (c/a > 2) for CaBrF, CaIF, and SrIF, in which Br/I acts as a rattler, as evidenced from potential energy curves and phonon density of states. The low axial (c/a) ratio leads to relatively isotropic κl values in the BaXF (X = Cl, Br, I) series. MXF (M = Ca, Sr, Ba) compounds exhibit highly anisotropic (a large phonon transport anisotropy ratio of 10.95 for CaIF) to isotropic (a small phonon transport anisotropy ratio of 1.49 for BaBrF) κl values despite their iso-structure. Moreover, ultralow κl (<1 W/m K) values have been predicted for CaBrF, CaIF, and SrIF in the out-of-plane direction due to weak van der Waals (vdWs) bonding. Overall, this comprehensive study on MXF compounds provides insights into designing low κl layered materials with a large axial ratio by fine-tuning out-of-plane bonding from ionic to vdWs bonding.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(42): 17944-17955, 2020 Oct 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31961671

RESUMO

Relative to the rich library of small-molecule organics, few examples of ordered extended (i.e., nonmolecular) hydrocarbon networks are known. In particular, sp3 bonded, diamond-like materials represent appealing targets because of their desirable mechanical, thermal, and optical properties. While many covalent organic frameworks (COFs)-extended, covalently bonded, and porous structures-have been realized through molecular architecture with exceptional control, the design and synthesis of dense, covalent extended solids has been a longstanding challenge. Here we report the preparation of a sp3-bonded, low-dimensional hydrocarbon synthesized via high-pressure, solid-state diradical polymerization of cubane (C8H8), which is a saturated, but immensely strained, cage-like molecule. Experimental measurements show that the obtained product is crystalline with three-dimensional order that appears to largely preserve the basic structural topology of the cubane molecular precursor and exhibits high hardness (comparable to fused quartz) and thermal stability up to 300 °C. Among the plausible theoretical candidate structures, one-dimensional carbon scaffolds comprising six- and four-membered rings that pack within a pseudosquare lattice provide the best agreement with experimental data. These diamond-like molecular rods with extraordinarily small thickness are among the smallest members in the carbon nanothread family, and calculations indicate one of the stiffest one-dimensional systems known. These results present opportunities for the synthesis of purely sp3-bonded extended solids formed through the strain release of saturated molecules, as opposed to only unsaturated precursors.

3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 10(22): 7164-7171, 2019 Nov 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31601100

RESUMO

Nanothreads are one-dimensional sp3 hydrocarbons that pack within pseudohexagonal crystalline lattices. They are believed to lack long-range order along the thread axis and also lack interthread registry. Here we investigate the phase behavior of thiophene up to 35 GPa and establish a pressure-induced phase transition sequence that mirrors previous observations in low-temperature studies. Slow compression to 35 GPa results in the formation of a recoverable saturated product with a 2D monoclinic diffraction pattern along (0001) that agrees closely with atomistic simulations for single crystals of thiophene-derived nanothreads. Paradoxically, this lower-symmetry packing signals a higher degree of structural order since it must arise from constituents with a consistent azimuthal orientation about their shared axis. The simplicity of thiophene reaction pathways (with only four carbon atoms per ring) apparently yields the first nanothreads with orientational order, a striking outcome considering that a single point defect in a 1D system can disrupt long-range structural order.

4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 9(8): 2031-2037, 2018 Apr 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29561621

RESUMO

The chemical stability of solid cubane under high-pressure was examined with in situ Raman spectroscopy and synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) in a diamond anvil cell (DAC) up to 60 GPa. The Raman modes associated with solid cubane were assigned by comparing experimental data with calculations based on density functional perturbation theory, and low-frequency lattice modes are reported for the first time. The equation of state of solid cubane derived from the PXRD measurements taken during compression gives a bulk modulus of 14.5(2) GPa. In contrast with previous work and chemical intuition, PXRD and Raman data indicate that solid cubane exhibits anomalously large stability under extreme pressure, despite its immensely strained 90° C-C-C bond angles.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(15): 4969-4972, 2018 04 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29569919

RESUMO

Carbon nanothreads are a new one-dimensional sp3 carbon nanomaterial. They assemble into hexagonal crystals in a room temperature, nontopochemical solid-state reaction induced by slow compression of benzene to 23 GPa. Here we show that pyridine also reacts under compression to form a well-ordered sp3 product: C5NH5 carbon nitride nanothreads. Solid pyridine has a different crystal structure from solid benzene, so the nontopochemical formation of low-dimensional crystalline solids by slow compression of small aromatics may be a general phenomenon that enables chemical design of properties. The nitrogen in the carbon nitride nanothreads may improve processability, alters photoluminescence, and is predicted to reduce the bandgap.

6.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(10): 7282-7294, 2018 Mar 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29485162

RESUMO

The 1 : 1 acetylene-benzene cocrystal, C2H2·C6H6, was synthesized under pressure in a diamond anvil cell (DAC) and its evolution under pressure was studied with single-crystal X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. C2H2·C6H6 is stable up to 30 GPa, nearly 10× the observed polymerization pressure for molecular acetylene to polyacetylene. Upon mild heating at 30 GPa, the cocrystal was observed to undergo an irreversible transition to a mixture of amorphous hydrocarbon and a crystalline phase with similar diffraction to i-carbon, a nanodiamond polymorph currently lacking a definitive structure. Characterization of this i-carbon-like phase suggests that it remains hydrogenated and may help explain previous observations of nanodiamond polymorphs. Potential reaction pathways in C2H2·C6H6 are discussed and compared with other theoretical extended hydrocarbons that may be obtained through crystal engineering. The cocrystallization of benzene with other more inert gases may provide a novel pathway to selectively control the rich chemistry of these materials.

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