Novel ionic plastic phase of [(CH3)4N]SCN obtainable above 455 K studied by proton magnetic resonance, electrical conductivity and thermal measurements
Abstract
A new high-temperature solid phase of tetramethylammonium thiocyanate has been found above the phase transition at 455 K, where a large entropy change (15 J K–1 mol–1) was observed. X-ray powder patterns recorded at ca. 470 K showed that this phase forms a CsCl-type cubic lattice with aO= 600 pm, indicating that the SCN– anions take highly disordered orientations. The presence of rapid three-dimensional self-diffusion, as well as the overall rotation of the cations in this phase, was revealed by the measurements of 1H NMR spin–lattice relaxation times, T1 and T1ρ, the second moment of NMR absorptions and the electrical conductivity. The large ionic-diffusion constant (of the order of 10–13 m2 s–1) obtained around 490 K is roughly the same as those reported for ‘ionic plastic’ crystals. An activation energy of ca. 110 kJ mol–1 was determined for cationic self-diffusion. These results imply that this new phase is the first example of an ionic plastic crystal containing tetramethylammonium cations.