4.8 Article

Fully Controllable Structural Phase Transition in Thermomechanical Molecular Crystals with a Very Small Thermal Hysteresis

Journal

SMALL
Volume 17, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202006757

Keywords

crystalline machine; organic crystals; shape memory; structural phase transition

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [21773168]
  2. 111 Project of China [B18030]
  3. Dutch Research Council (NWO)
  4. China Scholarship Council (CSC)
  5. Radboud University

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By controlling the phase boundaries of a thermomechanical molecular crystal, the structural phase transition can be finely controlled, reducing thermal hysteresis and allowing for continuous work output.
The construction of a practical crystalline molecular machine faces two challenges: to realize a collective molecular movement, and to amplify this movement into a precisely controlled mechanical response in real time and space. Thermosalient single crystals display cooperative molecular movements that are converted to strong macroscopic mechanical responses or shape deformations during temperature-induced structural phase transitions. However, these collective molecular movements are hard to control once initiated, and often feature thermal hystereses that are larger than 10 degrees C, which greatly hamper their practical applications. Here, it is demonstrated that the phase boundaries of the thermomechanical molecular crystal based on a fluorenone derivative 4-DBpFO can be used to finely control its structural phase transition. When this phase transition is triggered at two opposite crystal faces, it is accompanied by two parallel phase boundaries that can be temperature controlled to move forward, backward, or to halt, benefitting from the stored elastic energy between the parallel boundaries. Moreover, the thermal hysteresis is greatly decreased to 2-3 degrees C, which allows for circular heating/cooling cycles that can produce a continuous work output.

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