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Unusually these caffeine crystals are highly elastic. The researchers think this may be down to elasticity in the crystal sheets © Wiley-VCH
Malla Reddy and Soumyajit Ghosh at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research in Kolkata were attempting to co-crystallise caffeine and another flat molecule, 4-chloro-3-nitrobenzoic acid (CNB), into crystals in which the molecules were arranged in flat, sheet-like layers. When they dissolved the two compounds in methanol and allowed the solvent to slowly evaporate, they got some of these crystals, but also some long needle-like crystals.
Investigating the structure of these needles, it was immediately obvious that they were unusually elastic. ‘Normally, crystalline materials are very brittle and snap when you bend them more than a few degrees,’ Reddy says. Alternatively, the molecules can slip over each other and remain in their new positions when the force is removed, leading to permanent, plastic deformation.
But if the molecules aren’t moving over each other, how does the material bend? Reddy proposes that ‘in the bending process the sheets themselves stretch and contract on the outer and inner arcs of the crystal’, with the trapped solvent molecules helping maintain the relatively weak intermolecular interactions that hold the sheets together as the molecules themselves are pulled apart or pushed together.
The list of performance requirements for elastic materials to be used in applications from flexible electronics to artificial muscles is huge, comments Pance Naumov, who researches functional materials at New York University Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. ‘Understanding the underlying molecular processes by which an external force generates a mechanical response is critically important for target-oriented design,’ he adds. ‘The results bring research on [these] materials to a new level, where one could screen and possibly intentionally tune the mechanical properties, simply by modifying one or more of the chemical components.’
2 May 2013
Feature
How do animals survive in the extreme cold? James Mitchell Crow investigates
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