Abstract

Molecular crystals are not known to be as stiff as metals, composites and ceramics. Here we report an exceptional mechanical stiffness and high hardness in a known elastically bendable organic cocrystal [caffeine (CAF), 4-chloro-3-nitrobenzoic acid (CNB) and methanol (1:1:1)] which is comparable to certain low-density metals. Spatially resolved atomic level studies reveal that the mechanically interlocked weak hydrogen bond networks which are separated by dispersive interactions give rise to these mechanical properties. Upon bending, the crystals significantly conserve the overall energy by efficient redistribution of stress while perturbations in hydrogen bonds are compensated by strengthened π-stacking. Furthermore we report a remarkable stiffening and hardening in the elastically bent crystal. Hence, mechanically interlocked architectures provide an unexplored route to reach new mechanical limits and adaptability in organic crystals. This proof of concept inspires the design of light-weight, stiff crystalline organics with potential to rival certain inorganics, which currently seem inconceivable. Molecular crystals are typically less stiff than metals or ceramics. Here the authors report an organic elastically bendable co-crystal with stiffness comparable to low-density metals, hardness similar to stainless steel and reveal the molecular mechanism which lead to these mechanical properties.

Highlights

  • The authors wish to retract this paper after they were notified about possible artefacts in their data

  • The authors re-analysed the face indexing on the crystal and agree that the longest dimension of the crystal is along the stacking direction parallel c-axis in agreement with[1]

  • The authors agree that the accurate description of atoms using isotropic ADPs is more appropriate than achieving anisotropic ADPs considering the limitations with the data from bent crystals

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Summary

Introduction

The authors wish to retract this paper after they were notified about possible artefacts in their data. Retraction Note: Mechanically interlocked architecture aids an ultra-stiff and ultra-hard elastically bendable cocrystal

Results
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