ABSTRACT
Low frequency dynamics has been studied in a CH3NH3PbBr3 hybrid perovskite single crystal by using four different spectroscopy techniques: coherent inelastic neutron, Raman and Brillouin scatterings, and ultrasound measurements. Sound velocities were measured over five decades in energy to yield the complete set of elastic constants in a hybrid halide perovskite crystal in the pseudocubic plastic phase. The C44 shear elastic constant is very small, leading to a particularly low resistance to shear stress. Brillouin scattering has been used to study the relaxation dynamics of methylammonium cations and to evidence translation-rotation coupling associated with the cubic to tetragonal phase transition at Tc ≈ 230 K. Low frequency and highly damped optical phonons observed using both Raman and inelastic neutron below 18 meV, do not present softening close to Tc. The critical dynamics at Tc ≈ 230 K is compatible with an order-disorder character, dominated by relaxational motions of the molecules.
ABSTRACT
We report incoherent quasielastic neutron scattering experiments on the thermotropic liquid crystal 4-n-octyl-4'-cyanobiphenyl. The combination of time-of-flight and backscattering data allows analysis of the intermediate scattering function over about three decades of relaxation times. Translational diffusion and uniaxial molecular rotations are clearly identified as the major relaxation processes in, respectively, the nanosecond and picosecond time scales.
Subject(s)
Biphenyl Compounds/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Models, Chemical , Neutrons , Nitriles/chemistry , Scattering, Radiation , Diffusion , Quantum Theory , Rotation , Temperature , Time FactorsABSTRACT
Numerous crystalline materials, including those of bioorganic origin, comprise incommensurate sublattices whose mutual arrangement is described in a superspace framework exceeding three dimensions. We report direct observation by neutron diffraction of superspace symmetry breaking in a solid-solid phase transition of an incommensurate host-guest system: the channel inclusion compound of nonadecane/urea. Strikingly, this phase transition generates a unit cell doubling that concerns only the modulation of one substructure by the other-an internal variable available only in superspace. This unanticipated pathway for degrees of freedom to rearrange leads to a second phase transition, which again is controlled by the higher dimensionality of superspace. These results reveal nature's capacity to explore the increased number of phases allowed in aperiodic crystals.
ABSTRACT
This Letter reports on the structural analysis of a self-assembly material, the prototype host-guest urea-alkane nanoporous crystal. Different spectroscopic techniques, under hydrostatic pressure, reveal a totally unexpected ordered phase where ordering does not require any apparent deformation of the host. This fundamental observation raises the question of the actual interactions in other similar supramolecular or biological tubular systems.
ABSTRACT
This Letter reports on the first observation of depinning under hydrostatic pressure of the guest and host sublattices inside the aperiodic nonadecane-urea inclusion compound. This leads to a unique way for a direct determination of the one-dimensional interguest interaction (1 N/m for nonadecane).