A ferroelectric with a high phase‐transition temperature (Tc) is an indispensable condition for practical applications. Over the past decades, both strain engineering and the isotope effect have been found to effectively improve the Tc within ferroelectric material systems. However, the former strategy seems to prefer working in inorganic ferroelectric thin films, while the latter is also limited to some certain systems, such as hydrogen‐bonded ferroelectrics. It is noted that a mono‐fluorinated molecule is geometrically very similar to its parent molecule and the substitution of H by an F atom can introduce a chiral center on the molecule to template or stabilize polar structures. Significantly, the barrier of rotation of the fluorinated organic molecules is raised, resulting in a remarkable increase in Tc. Herein, by applying the molecular design strategy of H/F substitution to the organic–inorganic perovskite ferroelectric (pyrrolidinium)CdCl3 with a low Tc of 240 K, two high‐Tc chiral perovskite ferroelectrics, (R)‐ and (S)‐3‐F‐(pyrrolidinium)CdCl3 are successfully synthesized, for which the Tc reaches 303 K. The significant enhancement of 63 K in Tc extends the ferroelectric working temperature range to room temperature. This finding provides a new effective way to regulate the Tc in ferroelectrics and to design high‐Tc molecular ferroelectrics.
The past decade has witnessed much progress in designing molecular ferroelectrics, whose intrinsic mechanical flexibility, structural tunability, and easy processability are desirable for next-generation flexible and wearable electronic devices. However, an obstacle in expanding their promising applications in nonvolatile memory elements, capacitors, and sensors is effectively modulating the Curie temperature (T c ).Here, taking advantage of fluorine substitution on the reported molecular ferroelectric, (pyrrolidinium)MnCl 3 , we present enantiomeric perovskite ferroelectrics, namely, (R)and (S)-3-(fluoropyrrolidinium)MnCl 3 . The close van der Waal's radii and the similar steric parameters between H and F atoms ensure the minimum disruption of the crystal structure, while their different electronegativity and polarizability can trigger significant changes in the physical and chemical properties. As expected, the T c gets successfully increased from 295 K in (pyrrolidinium)MnCl 3 to 333 K in these two homochiral compounds. Such a dramatic enhancement of 38 K signifies an important step toward designing high-T c molecular ferroelectrics. In the light of the conceptually new idea of fluorine substitution, one could look forward to a continuous succession of new molecular ferroelectric materials and technology developments.
For nearly 100 y, homochiral ferroelectrics were basically multicomponent simple organic amine salts and metal coordination compounds. Single-component homochiral organic ferroelectric crystals with high-Curie temperature (T c ) phase transition were very rarely reported, although the first ferroelectric Rochelle salt discovered in 1920 is a homochiral metal coordination compound. Here, we report a pair of single-component organic enantiomorphic ferroelectrics, (R)-3-quinuclidinol and (S)-3-quinuclidinol, as well as the racemic mixture (Rac)-3-quinuclidinol. The homochiral (R)-and (S)-3-quinuclidinol crystallize in the enantiomorphic-polar point group 6 (C 6 ) at room temperature, showing mirror-image relationships in vibrational circular dichroism spectra and crystal structure. Both enantiomers exhibit 622F6-type ferroelectric phase transition with as high as 400 K [above that of BaTiO 3 (T c = 381 K)], showing very similar ferroelectricity and related properties, including sharp step-like dielectric anomaly from 5 to 17, high saturation polarization (7 μC/cm 2 ), low coercive field (15 kV/cm), and identical ferroelectric domains. Their racemic mixture (Rac)-3-quinuclidinol, however, adopts a centrosymmetric point group 2/m (C 2h ), undergoing a nonferroelectric high-temperature phase transition. This finding reveals the enormous benefits of homochirality in designing high-T c ferroelectrics, and sheds light on exploring homochiral ferroelectrics with great application. ferroelectricity | homochirality | enantiomer | ferroelectric domains
International audienceSurface grafting from diazonium solutions triggered by localized surface plasmon has been investigated. An organic layer that is 20−30 nm thick is easily grafted onto gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) by visible-light illumination in a few minutes without any reducing agent or molecular photocatalyst. Grafting depends on the wavelength and polarization of the incident light. As a consequence, the orientation of the growth of the layer deposited on the AuNPs can be controlled by polarized light. Grafting is also highly enhanced between adjacent AuNPs or at the corners of triangular AuNPs, that is, in plasmonic hot spots. These results clearly demonstrate plasmon enhancement and strongly suggest that the transfer of hot electrons from the excited plasmonic NPs to the diazonium is the main mechanism. They also confirm that localized surface plasmon resonance can induce nano-localized electrochemical reactions, thus contributing to the field of " plasmonic electrochemistry "
For a century ferroelectricity has attracted widespread interest from science and industry. Inorganic ferroelectric ceramics have dominated multibillion dollar industries of electronic ceramics, ranging from nonvolatile memories to piezoelectric sonar or ultrasonic transducers, whose polarization can be reoriented in multiple directions so that they can be used in the ceramic and thin-film forms. However, the realization of macroscopic ferroelectricity in the polycrystalline form is challenging for molecular ferroelectrics. In pursuit of low-cost, biocompatible, and mechanically flexible alternatives, the development of multiaxial molecular ferroelectrics is imminent. Here, from quinuclidinium perrhenate, we applied fluorine substitution to successfully design a multiaxial molecular ferroelectric, 3-fluoroquinuclidinium perrhenate ([3-F-Q]ReO4), whose macroscopic ferroelectricity can be realized in both powder compaction and thin-film forms. The fluorination effect not only increases the intrinsic polarization but also reduces the coercive field strength. More importantly, it is also, as far as we know, the softest of all known molecular ferroelectrics, whose low Vickers hardness of 10.5 HV is comparable with that in poly(vinylidene difluoride) (PVDF) but almost 2 orders of magnitude lower than that in BaTiO3. These attributes make it an ideal candidate for flexible and wearable devices and biomechanical applications.
1,4‐Diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (dabco) and its derivatives have been extensively utilized as building units of excellent molecular ferroelectrics for decades. However, the homochiral dabco‐based ferroelectric remains a blank. Herein, by adding a methyl (Me) group accompanied by the introduction of homochirality to the [H2dabco]2+ in the non‐ferroelectric [H2dabco][TFSA]2 (TFSA=bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)ammonium), we successfully designed enantiomeric ferroelectrics [R and S‐2‐Me‐H2dabco][TFSA]2. The two enantiomers show two sequential phase transitions with transition temperature (Tc) as high as 405.8 K and 415.8 K, which is outstanding in both dabco‐based ferroelectrics and homochiral ferroelectrics. To our knowledge, [R and S‐2‐Me‐H2dabco][TFSA]2 are the first examples of dabco‐based homochiral ferroelectrics. This finding opens an avenue to construct dabco‐based homochiral ferroelectrics and will inspire the exploration of more eminent enantiomeric molecular ferroelectrics.
This paper describes tunneling junctions comprising self-assembled monolayers that can be converted between resistor and diode functionality in-place. The rectification ratio is affected by the hydration of densely packed carboxylic acid groups at the interface between the top-contact and the monolayer. We studied this process by treatment with water and a water scavenger using three different top-contacts, eutectic Ga–In (EGaIn), conducting-probe atomic force microscopy (CP-AFM), and reduced graphene oxide (rGO), demonstrating that the phenomena is molecular in nature and is not platform-speciffc. We propose a mechanism in which the tunneling junctions convert to diode behavior through the lowering of the LUMO, which is suffcient to bring it close to resonance at positive bias, potentially assisted by a Stark shift. This shift in energy is supported by calculations and a change in polarization observed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Kelvin probe measurements. We demonstrate light-driven modulation using spiropyran as a photoacid, suggesting that any chemical process that is coupled to the release of small molecules that can tightly bind carboxylic acid groups can be used as an external stimulus to modulate rectification. The ability to convert a tunneling junction reversibly between a diode and a resistor via an effect that is intrinsic to the molecules in the junction extends the possible applications of Molecular Electronics to reconfigurable circuits and other new functionalities that do not have direct analogs in conventional semiconductor devices.
Organic−inorganic ABX 3 (A, B = cations, X = anion) hybrids with perovskite structure have recently attracted tremendous interest due to their structural tunability and rich functional properties, such as ferroelectricity. However, ABX 3 hybrid ferroelectrics with other structures have rarely been reported. Here, we successfully designed an ABX 3 hybrid ferroelectric [(CH 3 ) 3 NCH 2 F]ZnCl 3 with a spontaneous polarization of 4.8 μC/cm 2 by the molecular modification of [(CH 3 ) 4 N]-ZnCl 3 through hydrogen/halogen substitution. It is the first zinc halide ABX 3 ferroelectric, which contains one-dimensional [ZnCl 3 ] − n chains of corner-sharing ZnCl 4 tetrahedra, distinct from the anionic framework of corner-sharing or face-sharing BX 6 octahedra in the ABX 3 perovskites. From zero dimension to one dimension, the high symmetry of ZnCl 4 tetrahedra is broken, and all of them align along one direction to form a polar [ZnCl 3 ] − n chain, beneficial to the generation of ferroelectricity. This finding provides an efficient polar anionic framework for enriching the family of hybrid ferroelectrics by assembling with various cations and should inspire further exploration of new classes of organic−inorganic ABX 3 ferroelectrics.
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