Publication | Closed Access
Superelastic Organic Crystals
169
Citations
8
References
2014
Year
EngineeringSuperelastic Organic CrystalsMechanical EngineeringLow DensityChemistrySoft MatterStructural MaterialsMicrostructure-strength RelationshipCrystal FormationMaterials ScienceCrystal MaterialMaterial PropertySolid MechanicsCrystallographyCrystal Structure DesignOrganic ComponentsHigh Temperature MaterialsMechanical PropertiesCrystalsPure Organic CrystalFunctional MaterialsMechanics Of Materials
Abstract Superelastic materials (crystal‐to‐crystal transformation pseudo elasticity) that consist of organic components have not been observed since superelasticity was discovered in a Au‐Cd alloy in 1932. Superelastic materials have been exclusively developed in metallic or inorganic covalent solids, as represented by Ti‐Ni alloys. Organosuperelasticity is now revealed in a pure organic crystal of terephthalamide, which precisely produces a large motion with high repetition and high energy storage efficiency. This process is driven by a small shear stress owing to the low density of strain energy related to the low lattice energy.
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