Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Chemistry === Mark D. Hollingsworth === Urea inclusion compounds (UICs) are classic examples of nanoporous, host:guest materials in which the linear channels of the honeycomb structure of the urea host can include various types of long-chain compounds (the gues...

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Main Author: Wang, Bo
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35597
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-355972017-07-21T15:47:36Z Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds Wang, Bo Synchrotron X-ray Urea inclusion compounds Phase transition Doctor of Philosophy Department of Chemistry Mark D. Hollingsworth Urea inclusion compounds (UICs) are classic examples of nanoporous, host:guest materials in which the linear channels of the honeycomb structure of the urea host can include various types of long-chain compounds (the guests). By using synchrotron X-ray radiation sources, a deeper understanding of these materials is made possible through detailed structural studies. In particular, this dissertation describes a series of structural phase transitions that occur upon cooling two related UICs containing alkanedione guest molecules. UICs may be classified as either commensurate or incommensurate structures, depending on whether the repeat lengths of the host (c[subscript h]) and guest (c[subscript g]) along the channel axis are related by a small whole number ratio. Crystals of 2,8-nonanedione/urea and 2,11-dodecanedione/urea, which are incommensurate structures at room temperature, undergo "lock-in" phase transitions below room temperature to generate commensurate structures in which the guest repeat lengths are elongated. Upon nucleation and growth of these elongated, commensurate phases, other molecules in the same channels are compressed to give successively shorter guest repeat lengths. Further lock-in phase transitions give a multitude of commensurate and incommensurate phases during cooling. The crystal structures of two of these commensurate phases have been determined using synchrotron sources. The "self-compression" observed in these 1-D crystals serves as a paradigm for understanding solid-state reactions in three-dimensional crystals. 2017-05-16T15:56:58Z 2017-05-16T15:56:58Z 2017 August Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35597 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Synchrotron X-ray
Urea inclusion compounds
Phase transition
spellingShingle Synchrotron X-ray
Urea inclusion compounds
Phase transition
Wang, Bo
Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Chemistry === Mark D. Hollingsworth === Urea inclusion compounds (UICs) are classic examples of nanoporous, host:guest materials in which the linear channels of the honeycomb structure of the urea host can include various types of long-chain compounds (the guests). By using synchrotron X-ray radiation sources, a deeper understanding of these materials is made possible through detailed structural studies. In particular, this dissertation describes a series of structural phase transitions that occur upon cooling two related UICs containing alkanedione guest molecules. UICs may be classified as either commensurate or incommensurate structures, depending on whether the repeat lengths of the host (c[subscript h]) and guest (c[subscript g]) along the channel axis are related by a small whole number ratio. Crystals of 2,8-nonanedione/urea and 2,11-dodecanedione/urea, which are incommensurate structures at room temperature, undergo "lock-in" phase transitions below room temperature to generate commensurate structures in which the guest repeat lengths are elongated. Upon nucleation and growth of these elongated, commensurate phases, other molecules in the same channels are compressed to give successively shorter guest repeat lengths. Further lock-in phase transitions give a multitude of commensurate and incommensurate phases during cooling. The crystal structures of two of these commensurate phases have been determined using synchrotron sources. The "self-compression" observed in these 1-D crystals serves as a paradigm for understanding solid-state reactions in three-dimensional crystals.
author Wang, Bo
author_facet Wang, Bo
author_sort Wang, Bo
title Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
title_short Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
title_full Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
title_fullStr Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
title_full_unstemmed Synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
title_sort synchrotron studies of "self-compression" in urea inclusion compounds
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/35597
work_keys_str_mv AT wangbo synchrotronstudiesofselfcompressioninureainclusioncompounds
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