Scientists have discovered "strange-behaving" crystals which they believe
could be used in computing applications including hard drives and PC displays.
Mark D. Hollingsworth, associate professor of chemistry at
Kansas
State University, explained that there are rules governing the behaviour of
crystals during phase transitions between different states.
However, newly discovered aperiodic materials that lack a regularly repeating
structure do not necessarily obey these rules.
These rule-bending crystals are the focus of an article co-authored by
Hollingsworth that appears in the 4 January issue of Science.
Hollingsworth and his collaborator, French researcher Bertrand Toudic, looked
at how these aperiodic crystals behave differently from "normal" periodic
crystals.
These differences could have implications for research and for technology
that relies on crystals, from computer displays to hard drives.
Hollingsworth looked at crystals that form a host-guest structure. In this
case, urea molecules formed tunnels around nonadecane molecules, making a
honeycomb-like structure that takes the form of a double-helix, the shape of
DNA.
In periodic host-guest crystals, the host molecules forming the tunnels and
the guest molecules inside form a regularly repeating structure. But not so with
the rule-breaking aperiodic crystals.
In aperiodic crystals, in which the host and guest structures do not match,
the guest molecules protrude from the ends of the crystals, making the surface
rough. This makes it easier to attach new molecules to the end of the crystal.
But the researchers found that it "really gets weird" when the crystals
undergo transitions from one phase to another.
The researchers observed the crystals at different temperatures above the
phase transition. One class of reflections, called satellite reflections,
measures the interaction between the guest and host molecules.
The researchers were surprised by what happened when the crystal was cooled
to about -190 degrees Fahrenheit.
The satellite reflections showed a change in the interaction between the host
and guest structures but no noticeable changes in either the host or guest
structures themselves.
"Previously, we thought these materials had homogenous phase transitions and
that the normal rules concerning symmetry breaking applied to them,"
Hollingsworth said.
In addition to affecting research, these different rules also could have
impacts on technology, he said.
Crystals like the ones featured in the Science article are ferroelastic. That
means that the molecules within the crystals reorient when the crystals are
squeezed.
The researchers can do this with a small anvil and observe the rotations of
large domains in the crystals by viewing the crystal under a microscope.
Closely related ferroelectric materials are important to technology because
the domains within these materials can be reoriented with electric fields to
allow or prohibit polarized light to pass through. This makes them useful in
electronic displays.
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