Anharmonicity of molecular vibrational motions is closely associated with the thermal property of crystals. However, the origin of anharmonicity is still not fully understood. Low-frequency vibrations, which are usually defined in the terahertz (THz) range, show excellent sensitivity to anharmonicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSingle-atom catalysis is the new frontier of heterogeneous catalysis and has attracted considerable attention as it exhibits great potential in hydrogen evolution to mitigate energy crisis and environmental issues. The support materials for single-atom catalysts (SACs) play a significant role in stabilizing the metal atoms, preventing their aggregation, and enhancing the catalytic activity. Two-dimensional sp hybridized PHE-graphene might be a real support for SACs due to the potential energy well induced by its enneagon, hexagon and pentagon carbon rings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
March 2021
Co-crystallization is an effective strategy to improve the drug properties such as solubility and stability. However, its thermodynamic backgrounds, especially lattice vibration, haven't been fully understood. In this work, indomethacin (IND) cocrystals formed with nicotinamide (NIC) and saccharin (SAC) are successfully characterized by using terahertz spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe traditional view that natural allotropes are more stable than artificially synthesized structures is widely accepted. For instance, graphite and diamond are more energetically favorable than other new carbon allotropes no matter whether they are experimentally prepared or theoretically predicted. Surprisingly, we find that a family of multiporous carbon (N-diaphenes) could be thermodynamically more stable than natural diamond with the increase of its feature size parameter N.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
August 2020
Carbamazepine cocrystals with nicotinamide, saccharin and fumaric acid were synthesized and characterized by time-domain terahertz spectroscopy. Lattice vibrations of cocrystals with their individual constituents were investigated by means of the dispersion-corrected density functional theory with and without cell parameter constraints. The simulated THz spectra successfully reproduce the features of all the crystals in their experimental spectra.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries are considered as the most promising next generation high density energy storage devices. However, the commercialization of Li-S batteries is hindered by the shuttle effect of polysulfides, the low electronic conductivity of the sulfur cathode and a large volume expansion during lithiation. Herein, we predict a new two dimensional sp hybridized carbon allotrope (PHE-graphene) and prove its thermodynamic and kinetic stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAll-solid-state lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries offer the possibility of high theoretical energy densities and long cycle lifetime. Finding new multiporous insulating materials or wide bandgap semiconductors suitable for the transportation of Li-ions is a key problem for the application of solid state lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries. In this study, an sp2-hybridized multiporous boron nitride (d-BN) is found to be able to be used as a solid electrolyte or filter in Li-S batteries due to the lower energy barriers of Li-ion diffusion along its [110] direction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSulfur cathodes in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries still suffer from their low electronic conductivity, undesired dissolution of lithium polysulfide (LiS , 3 ≤ n ≤ 8) species into the electrolyte, and large degree volume change during the cycle. To overcome these problems, an effective encapsulation for the sulfur cathode is necessary. By means of particle swarm optimization (PSO) and density functional theory (DFT), we have predicted a stable metallic two-dimensional sp -hybridized carbon allotrope (DHP-graphene).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOn single-crystal surfaces, achiral molecules may become chiral owing to confinement in two dimensions (2D). Metal phthalocyanines (MPcs) on Cu(001) and Ag(100) surfaces have exhibited a chiral electronic state. However, the chirality is not always desirable since crystal defects (grain boundaries) inevitably occur between two different chiral domains during the self-assembly of single layers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReversible molecular switches with molecular orientation as the information carrier have been achieved on individual phthalocyanine (H2Pc) molecules adsorbed on a Cu(100) surface at room temperature. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) imaging directly demonstrates that H2Pc molecules can be controlled to move along the [011] or [011̅] surface direction of the Cu(100) surface, and the orientation of H2Pc molecules can also be switched between two angles of ±28° with respect to the [011] surface direction by a lateral manipulation. Owing to the highly efficient control over the adsorption site and orientation of H2Pc adsorbed on the Cu(100) surface by lateral manipulation, a pyramidal array formed by 10 H2Pc molecules has been constructed on the Cu surface as a prototype of binary memory, and every molecule within such a molecular array can be individually and reversibly controlled by a STM tip.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReversible molecular switches with molecular orientation as the information carrier have been achieved on individual fullerene molecules adsorbed on Si (111) surface at room temperature. Scanning tunneling microscopy imaging directly demonstrates that the orientation of individual fullerene with an adsorption geometry of 5-6 bond is rotated by integral times as 30 degree after a pulse bias is applied between the STM tip and the molecule. Dependences of the molecular rotation probability on the voltage and the process of applied bias reveal that the rotation of a fullerene molecule takes place in two successive steps: the bonding between the fullerene and the Si surface is firstly weakened via electronic excitation and then low energy electron bombardment causes the molecule to rotate by certain degree.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of dynamic processes on self-assembled structures of 4'-([2,2':6', 2''-terpyridin]-4'-yl)-[1,1'-biphenyl]-4-carboxylic acid (l) molecules on Au(III) has been studied by scanning tunneling microscopy. The as-deposited monolayer is closed-packed and periodic in a short-range due to dipole forces. A thermal annealing process at 110 degrees drives such disordered monolayer into ordered chain-like structures, determined by the combination of the dipole forces and hydrogen bonding.
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