Origin of chromic effects and crystal-To-crystal phase transition in the polymorphs of tyraminium violurate

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Abstract

Chromic materials are nowadays widely used in various technological applications, however understanding the effect and the possibility of tuning the obtained colour of a material are still challenging. Here a combined experimental and theoretical study is presented on the solvatochromic and crystallochromic effects in the (pseudo)polymorphs of tyraminium violurate. This organic material exhibits a large solvatochromic shift (ca 192nm) associated with broad colour change (from yellow to dark violet). Tyraminum violurate crystallizes as red crystals of form (I) from water as a solvate, and as an unsolvated form [violet crystals of (II)] from methanol solution. Form (I), when heated, undergoes two crystal-To-crystal phase transformations associated with colour change of the crystals. Crystals of (II) show extreme birefringence (ca 0.46) and high refractive index (n γ above 1.90), which can be correlated with preferential orientation of the resultant dipole moments of the ions. Examination of optical effects (UV-Vis spectra) along with theoretical calculations (QTAIM, atomic and bond polarizabilities) enabled the description of the origin of colour in the studied materials.

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Gryl, M., Rydz, A., Wojnarska, J., Krawczuk, A., Kozie, M., Seidler, T., … Stadnicka, K. M. (2019). Origin of chromic effects and crystal-To-crystal phase transition in the polymorphs of tyraminium violurate. IUCrJ, 6, 226–237. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2052252518017037

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