2D Cocrystallization from H-Bonded Organic Ferroelectrics
Author(s) -
Donna A. Kunkel,
James Hooper,
Benjamin Bradley,
Lisa Schlueter,
Tom Rasmussen,
Paulo S. Costa,
Sumit Beniwal,
Stephen Ducharme,
Eva Zurek,
Axel Enders
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.5b02472
Subject(s) - cocrystal , stoichiometry , intermolecular force , metastability , ferroelectricity , density functional theory , crystallography , dipole , scanning tunneling microscope , hydrogen bond , materials science , molecule , polar , chemical polarity , chemical physics , chemistry , computational chemistry , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , optoelectronics , astronomy , physics , dielectric
The synthesis of 2D H-bonded cocrystals from the room-temperature ferroelectric organics croconic acid (CA) and 3-hydroxyphenalenone (3-HPLN) is demonstrated through self-assembly on a substrate under ultrahigh vacuum. 2D cocrystal polymorphs of varied stoichiometry were identified with scanning tunneling microscopy, and one of the observed structural building blocks consists of two CA and two 3-HPLN molecules. Computational analysis with density functional theory confirmed that the experimental (CA)2(3-HPLN)2 tetramers are lower in energy than single-component structures due to the ability of the tetramers to pack efficiently in two dimensions, the promotion of favorable electrostatic interactions between tetramers, and the optimal number of intermolecular hydrogen bonds. The structures investigated, especially the experimentally found tetrameric building blocks, are not polar. However, it is demonstrated computationally that cocrystallization can, in principle, result in heterogeneous structures with dipole moments that exceed those of homogeneous structures and that 2D structures with select stoichiometries could favor metastable polar structures.
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