A Micromechanical Model for Light-interactive Molecular Crystals
Devesh Tiwari, Ananya Renuka Balakrishna

TL;DR
This paper introduces a micromechanical model based on the Cauchy-Born rule and photoreaction theory to predict diverse deformations in light-responsive molecular crystals, accounting for microstructural changes during phase transformations.
Contribution
The model uniquely incorporates lattice geometry changes and microstructural patterns to explain complex deformations in molecular crystals under light stimuli.
Findings
Interplay between photoexcited states and energy pathways influences deformation.
Particle geometry and light intensity affect deformation regimes.
Model can predict bending, twisting, and shearing behaviors.
Abstract
Molecular crystals respond to a light stimulus by bending, twisting, rolling, jumping, or other kinematic behaviors. These behaviors are known to be affected by, among others, the intensity of the incident light, the aspect ratios of crystal geometries, and the volume changes accompanying phase transformation. While these factors, individually, explain the increase in internal energy of the system and its subsequent minimization through macroscopic deformation, they do not fully explain the diversity of deformations observed in molecular crystals. Here, we propose a micromechanical model based on the Cauchy-Born rule and photoreaction theory to predict the macroscopic response in molecular crystals. By accounting for lattice geometry changes and microstructural patterns that emerge during phase transformation, we predict a range of deformations in a representative molecular crystal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCrystallography and molecular interactions · Supramolecular Self-Assembly in Materials
