Image of the solid-state rotary motion encoded in the dielectric response.
Marzena Rams-BaronAlfred BłażytkoKarolina JurkiewiczPiotr LodowskiMaria KsiążekJoachim KuszWitold MozgaMarta FordymackaMahshid TeymouriJulia KrzywikMarian PaluchPublished in: Reports on progress in physics. Physical Society (Great Britain) (2024)
The future development of advanced molecular systems with controlled rotation requires the development of an effective methodology for assessing the rotational performance of artificial machine components. We identified two patterns of the dielectric behavior for polar rotators in a static non-polar framework of sizable crystal showing relations between the spectral and molecular-level features of solid-state rotary motion. Various functionalization of phenylene rotors with a fluorine atom(s) changed rotational performance from high to low with rotational barriers ranging from 6.06 to 11.84 kcal mol -1 . The meta-F-substitution favored rotator-rotator contacts allowing for the implementation of fast rotary motion. Contrary, the presence of rotator-stator contacts inhibited independent rotator dynamics leading to opposite spectral behavior in terms of temperature evolution of loss peak amplitude. Our observations, supported by an analysis based on an asymmetric double well-potential model, show that easily noticeable spectral differences encoded some molecular-level information important for the implementation of rotary motion.