Chemical crystallography by serial femtosecond X-ray diffraction.
Elyse A SchriberDaniel W PaleyRobert BolotovskyDaniel J RosenbergRaymond G SierraAndrew L AquilaDerek MendezFrédéric P PoitevinJohannes P BlaschkeAsmit BhowmickRyan P KellyMark S HunterBrandon HayesDerek C PoppleMatthew YeungCarina Pareja-RiveraStella LisovaKensuke TonoMichihiro SugaharaShigeki OwadaTevye KuykendallKaiyuan YaoP James SchuckDiego Solis-IbarraNicholas K SauterAaron S BrewsterJ Nathan HohmanPublished in: Nature (2022)
Inorganic-organic hybrid materials represent a large share of newly reported structures, owing to their simple synthetic routes and customizable properties 1 . This proliferation has led to a characterization bottleneck: many hybrid materials are obligate microcrystals with low symmetry and severe radiation sensitivity, interfering with the standard techniques of single-crystal X-ray diffraction 2,3 and electron microdiffraction 4-11 . Here we demonstrate small-molecule serial femtosecond X-ray crystallography (smSFX) for the determination of material crystal structures from microcrystals. We subjected microcrystalline suspensions to X-ray free-electron laser radiation 12,13 and obtained thousands of randomly oriented diffraction patterns. We determined unit cells by aggregating spot-finding results into high-resolution powder diffractograms. After indexing the sparse serial patterns by a graph theory approach 14 , the resulting datasets can be solved and refined using standard tools for single-crystal diffraction data 15-17 . We describe the ab initio structure solutions of mithrene (AgSePh) 18-20 , thiorene (AgSPh) and tethrene (AgTePh), of which the latter two were previously unknown structures. In thiorene, we identify a geometric change in the silver-silver bonding network that is linked to its divergent optoelectronic properties 20 . We demonstrate that smSFX can be applied as a general technique for structure determination of beam-sensitive microcrystalline materials at near-ambient temperature and pressure.
Keyphrases
- electron microscopy
- high resolution
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- solid state