IUCrJ (Jul 2017)

Stochastic polarity formation in molecular crystals, composite materials and natural tissues

  • Jürg Hulliger,
  • Matthias Burgener,
  • Rolf Hesterberg,
  • Martin Sommer,
  • Khadidja Brahimi,
  • Hanane Aboulfadl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1107/S205225251700700X
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 360 – 368

Abstract

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This topical review summarizes the theoretical and experimental findings obtained over the last 20 years on the subject of growth-induced polarity formation driven by a Markov chain process. When entering the growing surface of a molecular crystal, an inorganic–organic composite or a natural tissue, the building blocks may undergo 180° orientational disorder. Driven by configurational entropy, faulted orientations can promote the conversion of a growing non-polar seed into an object showing polar domains. Similarly, orientational disorder at the interface may change a polar seed into a two-domain state. Analytical theory and Monte Carlo simulations were used to model polarity formation. Scanning pyroelectric, piezoresponse force and phase-sensitive second-harmonic microscopies are methods for investigating the spatial distribution of polarity. Summarizing results from different types of materials, a general principle is provided for obtaining growth-induced polar domains: a non-zero difference in the probabilities for 180° orientational misalignments of building blocks, together with uni-directional growth, along with Markov chain theory, can produce objects showing polar domains.

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