AI Article Synopsis

  • Molecular-based ferroic materials are gaining interest for their applications in sensors, switches, and memory, but enhancing their phase-transition temperatures remains a challenge.
  • Two new hexagonal molecular perovskites, (nortropinonium)[CdCl] and (nortropinium)[CdCl], have been developed, showcasing a straightforward design principle for achieving high ferroelastic phase transitions.
  • The differences in their organic cations, one featuring a rigid carbonyl and the other a flexible hydroxyl group, affect their intermolecular interactions, leading to one material lacking a crystalline phase transition and the other achieving multiple phase transitions and enhanced thermal stability.

Article Abstract

Molecular-based ferroic phase-transition materials have attracted increasing attention in the past decades due to their promising potential as sensors, switches, and memory. One of the long-term challenges in the development of molecular-based ferroic materials is determining how to promote the ferroic phase-transition temperature ( ). Herein, we present two new hexagonal molecular perovskites, (nortropinonium)[CdCl] (1) and (nortropinium)[CdCl] (2), to demonstrate a simple design principle for obtaining ultrahigh- ferroelastic phase transitions. They consist of same host inorganic chains but subtly different guest organic cations featuring a rigid carbonyl and a flexible hydroxyl group in 1 and 2, respectively. With stronger hydrogen bonds involving the carbonyl but a relatively lower decomposition temperature ( , 480 K), 1 does not exhibit a crystalline phase transition before its decomposition. The hydroxyl group subtly changes the balance of intermolecular interactions in 2 reducing the attractive hydrogen bonds but increasing the repulsive interactions between adjacent organic cations, which finally endows 2 with an enhanced thermal stability ( = 570 K) and three structural phase transitions, including two ferroelastic phase transitions at ultrahigh values of 463 K and 495 K, respectively. This finding provides important clues to judiciously tuning the intermolecular interactions in hybrid crystals for developing high- ferroic materials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9728566PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc04112jDOI Listing

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