Effect of polar surfaces on organic molecular crystals

ORAL

Abstract

Polar oxide materials reveal intriguing opportunities in the field of electronics, superconductivity and nanotechnology. While behavior of polar surfaces has been widely studied on oxide materials and oxide-oxide interfaces, manifestations and properties of polar surfaces in molecular crystals are still poorly understood. Here we discover that the polar catastrophe phenomenon, known on oxides, also takes place in molecular materials as illustrated with an example of cyclotetramethylene tetranitramine (HMX) crystals. We show that the surface charge separation is a feasible compensation mechanism to counterbalance the macroscopic dipole moment and remove the electrostatic instability. We discuss the role of surface charge on degradation of polar surfaces, electrical conductivity, optical band-gap closure and surface metallization.

*Research is supported by the US ONR (Grants N00014-16-1-2069 and N00014-16-1-2346) and NSF. We used NERSC, XSEDE and MARCC computational resources

Authors

  • Onise Sharia

    • University Of Maryland College Park
  • Roman Tsyshevskiy

    • University Of Maryland College Park
  • Maija Kuklja

    • University of Maryland College Park
    • Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
    • University Of Maryland College Park