Random Tiling and Topological Defects in a Two-Dimensional Molecular Network

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ISSN: 0036-8075
E-ISSN: 1095-9203

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American Association for the Advancement of Science
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Abstract

A molecular network that exhibits critical correlations in the spatial order that is characteristic of a random, entropically stabilized, rhombus tiling is described. Specifically, we report a random tiling formed in a twodimensional molecular network of p-terphenyl-3,5,3′,5′-tetracarboxylic acid adsorbed on graphite. The network is stabilized by hexagonal junctions of three, four, five, or six molecules and may be mapped onto a rhombus tiling in which an ordered array of vertices is embedded within a nonperiodic framework with spatial fluctuations in a local order characteristic of an entropically stabilized phase. We identified a topological defect that can propagate through the network, giving rise to a local reordering of molecular tiles and thus to transitions between quasi-degenerate local minima of a complex energy landscape. We draw parallels between the molecular tiling and dynamically arrested systems, such as glasses

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This is the Accepted Manuscript of the following article: Blunt, M.O., Russell, J.C., Gimenez Lopez, M.C., Garrahan, J.P., Lin, X., Schróder, M., Champness, N.R., Beton, P.H., Science, 2008, DOI:10.1126/science.116333

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Matthew O. Blunt et al. ,Random Tiling and Topological Defects in a Two-Dimensional Molecular Network.Science322,1077-1081(2008).DOI:10.1126/science.1163338

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional