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Sodium 4-nitrophenolate 4-nitrophenol dihydrate crystal: a new herringbone structure for quadratic nonlinear optics
28
Citations
8
References
1999
Year
Crystal StructureEngineeringNonlinear OpticsMetal NitrophenolatesOrganic ChemistryChemistryOptical PropertiesCrystal FormationMagnesium BisBiophysicsPhotonicsInorganic ChemistryNew Herringbone StructurePhysicsPhotochemistryQuadratic Nonlinear OpticsNon-linear OpticCrystal MaterialPhysical ChemistryNonlinear CrystalsSupramolecular ChemistrySupramolecular PhotochemistryCrystallographyPhotochromismCrystal Structure DesignNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsMolecule-based MaterialNonlinear Optical Efficiency
Sodium 4-nitrophenolate 4-nitrophenol dihydrate is a new nonlinear optical crystal of C2 monoclinic symmetry composed of two distinct organic chromophores of respective calculated molecular hyperpolarisabilities β xxx =18.2×10 –30 and 5.2×10 –30 esu. The chromophores are organised in herringbone motifs along inorganic chains of NaO6 edge shared octahedra. A short H-bond network assembles the herringbone motifs. A remarkable feature is the unique proton shared between the two chromophores respecting the twofold symmetry. The structure is isotypic with that of the magnesium bis(4-nitrophenolate) dihydrate. Structural analogies with other known metal nitrophenolates are pointed out and the nonlinear optical efficiency is discussed.
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