We report a series of powder X-ray diffraction experiments performed on the soft porous crystals MIL-53(Al) and NH2-MIL-53(Al) in a diamond anvil cell under different pressurization media. Systematic refinements of the obtained powder patterns demonstrate that these materials expand along a specific direction while undergoing total volume reduction under an increasing hydrostatic pressure. The results confirm for the first time the negative linear compressibility behaviour of this family of materials, recently predicted from quantum chemical calculations
Materials or systems demonstrating negative linear compressibility (NLC), whose size increases (decr...
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are a broad and interesting class of materials known for their mecha...
We show that KMn[Ag(CN)<sub>2</sub>]<sub>3</sub> exhibits the strongest negative linear compressibil...
We report a series of powder X-ray diffraction experiments performed on the soft porous crystals MIL...
Development of artificial muscles, next-generation pressure sensors and precision optics relies on a...
Negative linear compressibility (NLC) is a rare and counterintuitive phenomenon because materials wi...
17 pags., 18 figs., 5 tabs.Zinc squarate tetrahydrate (ZnCO·4HO) and titanium oxalate trioxide dihyd...
While all materials reduce their intrinsic volume under hydrostatic (uniform) compression, a select ...
© 2015 AIP Publishing LLC. Negative linear compressibility (NLC) is still considered an exotic prope...
Negative linear compressibility (NLC), the increase in a unit cell length with pressure, is a rare p...
Negative linear compressibility (NLC) is a relatively uncommon phenomenon and rarely studied in orga...
The counterintuitive phenomenon of negative linear compressibility (NLC) is a highly desirable but r...
Materials or systems demonstrating negative linear compressibility (NLC), whose size increases (decr...
High pressure single-crystal X-ray structural analyses of isostructural MFM-133(M) (M = Zr, Hf) of f...
Porous materials, including metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), are known to undergo structural changes...
Materials or systems demonstrating negative linear compressibility (NLC), whose size increases (decr...
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are a broad and interesting class of materials known for their mecha...
We show that KMn[Ag(CN)<sub>2</sub>]<sub>3</sub> exhibits the strongest negative linear compressibil...
We report a series of powder X-ray diffraction experiments performed on the soft porous crystals MIL...
Development of artificial muscles, next-generation pressure sensors and precision optics relies on a...
Negative linear compressibility (NLC) is a rare and counterintuitive phenomenon because materials wi...
17 pags., 18 figs., 5 tabs.Zinc squarate tetrahydrate (ZnCO·4HO) and titanium oxalate trioxide dihyd...
While all materials reduce their intrinsic volume under hydrostatic (uniform) compression, a select ...
© 2015 AIP Publishing LLC. Negative linear compressibility (NLC) is still considered an exotic prope...
Negative linear compressibility (NLC), the increase in a unit cell length with pressure, is a rare p...
Negative linear compressibility (NLC) is a relatively uncommon phenomenon and rarely studied in orga...
The counterintuitive phenomenon of negative linear compressibility (NLC) is a highly desirable but r...
Materials or systems demonstrating negative linear compressibility (NLC), whose size increases (decr...
High pressure single-crystal X-ray structural analyses of isostructural MFM-133(M) (M = Zr, Hf) of f...
Porous materials, including metal–organic frameworks (MOFs), are known to undergo structural changes...
Materials or systems demonstrating negative linear compressibility (NLC), whose size increases (decr...
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are a broad and interesting class of materials known for their mecha...
We show that KMn[Ag(CN)<sub>2</sub>]<sub>3</sub> exhibits the strongest negative linear compressibil...