4.6 Article

Spectroscopic investigation of order-disorder phase transition in 4-carboxyanilinium nitrate

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Chemistry, Physical

Reversible order-disorder phase transition and interaction topology in 4-carboxyanilinium nitrate

Lata Panicker et al.

Summary: A reversible order-disorder phase transition in 4-carboxyanilinium nitrate (4-CAN) has been studied, showing a first-order phase transition at 309.5K with different crystal structures below and above the transition temperature. Strong intermolecular interactions are formed through hydrogen bonds in both high and low temperature phases of 4-CAN.

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR STRUCTURE (2021)

Article Crystallography

The Role of Hydrogen Bond in Designing Molecular Optical Materials

Leonardo H. R. Dos Santos et al.

CRYSTALS (2016)

Article Thermodynamics

Thermal and kinetic study of the ferroelectric phase transition in deuterated triglycine selenate

F. J. Romero et al.

JOURNAL OF THERMAL ANALYSIS AND CALORIMETRY (2007)

Article Chemistry, Physical

Molecular structure of 4-aminobenzoic acid salts with alkali metals

R. Swislocka et al.

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR STRUCTURE (2006)

Article Chemistry, Physical

Experimental and theoretical IR, Raman, NMR spectra of 2-, 3- and 4-aminobenzoic acids

M Samsonowicz et al.

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR STRUCTURE (2005)

Article Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Structural and vibrational studies of anilinium nitrate

MK Marchewka et al.

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF SOLIDS (2005)

Article Crystallography

Growth and characterization of TGS and DTGS single crystals doped with Pt(II), Pt(IV) and L-alanine

J Novotny et al.

CRYSTAL RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY (2004)

Article Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

Dilatative and refractive properties of diglycine nitrate crystals in the range of phase transition

B Andriyevsky et al.

MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING B-SOLID STATE MATERIALS FOR ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY (2002)

Review Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

Self-assembly in synthetic macromolecular systems via multiple hydrogen bonding interactions

DC Sherrington et al.

CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS (2001)