F
François-Xavier Coudert
Researcher at Chimie ParisTech
Publications - 194
Citations - 14357
François-Xavier Coudert is an academic researcher from Chimie ParisTech. The author has contributed to research in topics: Adsorption & Zeolitic imidazolate framework. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 181 publications receiving 10517 citations. Previous affiliations of François-Xavier Coudert include University of Paris & University of Tokyo.
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Necessary and sufficient elastic stability conditions in various crystal systems
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present necessary and sufficient conditions for elastic stability in all crystal classes, as a concise and pedagogical reference to stability criteria in noncubic materials.
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ELATE: an open-source online application for analysis and visualization of elastic tensors.
TL;DR: This work reports on the implementation of a tool for the analysis of second-order elastic stiffness tensors, provided with both an open-source Python module and a standalone online application allowing the visualization of anisotropic mechanical properties.
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Correlated defect nanoregions in a metal–organic framework
Matthew J. Cliffe,Wei Wan,Xiaodong Zou,Philip A. Chater,Annette K. Kleppe,Matthew G. Tucker,Heribert Wilhelm,Nicholas P. Funnell,François-Xavier Coudert,Andrew L. Goodwin +9 more
TL;DR: It is shown—using a combination of diffuse scattering, electron microscopy, anomalous X-ray scattering, and pair distribution function measurements—that correlations between defects can in fact be introduced and controlled within a hafnium terephthalate metal–organic framework.
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A pressure-amplifying framework material with negative gas adsorption transitions
Simon Krause,Volodymyr Bon,Irena Senkovska,Ulrich Stoeck,Ulrich Stoeck,Dirk Wallacher,Daniel M. Többens,Stefan Zander,Renjith S. Pillai,Guillaume Maurin,François-Xavier Coudert,Stefan Kaskel +11 more
TL;DR: Negative gas adsorption extends the series of counterintuitive phenomena such as negative thermal expansion and negative refractive indices and may be interpreted as an adsorptive analogue of force-amplifying negative compressibility transitions proposed for metamaterials.
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Responsive Metal–Organic Frameworks and Framework Materials: Under Pressure, Taking the Heat, in the Spotlight, with Friends
TL;DR: A recent Perspective as discussed by the authors highlights recent progress in this field, showcasing some of the most novel and unusual responses to stimuli, as well as advances in the fundamental understanding of flexible framework materials.