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Molecular crystal global phase diagrams. III. Sufficient parameter space determination

Molecular crystal global phase diagrams. III. Sufficient parameter space determination In previous parts of this series Mettes et al. (2004). Acta Cryst. A60, 621-636; McClurg & Keith (2010). Acta Cryst. A66, 38-49 a method for constructing global phase diagrams (GPDs) for molecular crystals was developed and the method was applied to single-component ordered crystal structures of tetrahedral molecules. GPDs are useful for visualizing what types of crystal structures a given molecule may assume depending on molecular form/interaction. Their construction uses group-theoretical methods which enumerate all possible symmetry breakings during a statistical mechanical high-to-low temperature search. In this work these results are expanded upon by outlining a method to determine a sufficiently rich parameter space to represent the experimentally observed crystal structures in a data set derived from the Cambridge Structural Database. This is significant because previous work (Mettes et al., 2004) did not specify the number of parameters needed for GPDs. Although there are suggestions in the literature that thousands of parameters are required to adequately describe tetrahedral molecule intermolecular potentials, it is found that 15 parameters are sufficient to represent the structures of the test data. The origin of this difference and its implications for determining GPD parameter values from a more detailed intermolecular potential and for interpreting GPD parameter values are discussed. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Acta Crystallographica Section A: Foundations of Crystallography International Union of Crystallography

Molecular crystal global phase diagrams. III. Sufficient parameter space determination

Molecular crystal global phase diagrams. III. Sufficient parameter space determination


Abstract

In previous parts of this series Mettes et al. (2004). Acta Cryst. A60, 621-636; McClurg & Keith (2010). Acta Cryst. A66, 38-49 a method for constructing global phase diagrams (GPDs) for molecular crystals was developed and the method was applied to single-component ordered crystal structures of tetrahedral molecules. GPDs are useful for visualizing what types of crystal structures a given molecule may assume depending on molecular form/interaction. Their construction uses group-theoretical methods which enumerate all possible symmetry breakings during a statistical mechanical high-to-low temperature search. In this work these results are expanded upon by outlining a method to determine a sufficiently rich parameter space to represent the experimentally observed crystal structures in a data set derived from the Cambridge Structural Database. This is significant because previous work (Mettes et al., 2004) did not specify the number of parameters needed for GPDs. Although there are suggestions in the literature that thousands of parameters are required to adequately describe tetrahedral molecule intermolecular potentials, it is found that 15 parameters are sufficient to represent the structures of the test data. The origin of this difference and its implications for determining GPD parameter values from a more detailed intermolecular potential and for interpreting GPD parameter values are discussed.

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References (62)

Publisher
International Union of Crystallography
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2010 International Union of Crystallography
Subject
parametrization, phase diagrams, molecular crystals, data mining
ISSN
0108-7673
eISSN
1600-5724
DOI
10.1107/S0108767309047643
pmid
20029133
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

In previous parts of this series Mettes et al. (2004). Acta Cryst. A60, 621-636; McClurg & Keith (2010). Acta Cryst. A66, 38-49 a method for constructing global phase diagrams (GPDs) for molecular crystals was developed and the method was applied to single-component ordered crystal structures of tetrahedral molecules. GPDs are useful for visualizing what types of crystal structures a given molecule may assume depending on molecular form/interaction. Their construction uses group-theoretical methods which enumerate all possible symmetry breakings during a statistical mechanical high-to-low temperature search. In this work these results are expanded upon by outlining a method to determine a sufficiently rich parameter space to represent the experimentally observed crystal structures in a data set derived from the Cambridge Structural Database. This is significant because previous work (Mettes et al., 2004) did not specify the number of parameters needed for GPDs. Although there are suggestions in the literature that thousands of parameters are required to adequately describe tetrahedral molecule intermolecular potentials, it is found that 15 parameters are sufficient to represent the structures of the test data. The origin of this difference and its implications for determining GPD parameter values from a more detailed intermolecular potential and for interpreting GPD parameter values are discussed.

Journal

Acta Crystallographica Section A: Foundations of CrystallographyInternational Union of Crystallography

Published: Dec 17, 2009

Keywords: parametrization ; phase diagrams ; molecular crystals ; data mining .

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