CrystalExplorer

CrystalExplorer or CE is a freeware designed to analysis the crystal structure with *.cif file format.[1]

CrystalExplorer
Screenshot of generated Hirshfeld surface in CrystalExplorer17
Original author(s)D Jayatilaka and MA Spackman
Initial release2007 (2007)
Stable release
CrystalExplorer17 (CE17) / 2019 (2019)
Preview release
CrystalExplorer17
Operating systemWindows(7+),
GNU/Linux,
MacOS(10.10+)
Licensefree-of-charge (Conditions applicable)
Websitecrystalexplorer.scb.uwa.edu.au

CE is helpful to investigate different areas of solid-state chemistry such as Hirshfeld surface analysis, intermolecular interactions, polymorphism, effect of pressure and temperature on crystal structure, single-crystal to single-crystal reactions, analyzing the voids present in crystal, and structure-property relationships.[1][2]

The graphical interface of CE towards the 3D crystal structure visualization aids in drawing the crystal structure with or without Hirshfeld surface.[3]

History

CrystalExplorer launched as a graphical user interface which facilitates the visualization of interactions in molecular crystal structures. In 2006, M. A. Spackman's student Dylan Jayatilaka and coworkers presented a paper about their new crystallographic software in the occasion of 23rd European Crystallographic Meeting (ECM23) conducted in Leuven.[4] This software was designed by School of Biomedical and Chemical Sciences, University of Western Australia, Nedlands 6009, Australia. From 2006 onward researchers started citing the program in their research papers.

CrystalExplorer 2.1 designed for Mac OS X, Windows and Linux platforms for the analysis of crystal structures and can be used to investigate many areas of solid-state chemistry such as studying intermolecular interactions, polymorphism, the effects of pressure and temperature on crystal structures, single-crystal to single-crystal reactions, analyzing crystal voids, and structure-property relationships.[5]

Currently in 2020 September, there are more than 2000 research papers that cite CrystalExplorer software as per google scholar analysis.[6]

Licence

CrystalExplorer17 is licensed free-of-charges under conditions, such as not use the free version of CrystalExplorer to conduct commercial research, confidential research, or research that is not likely to be published in a peer-reviewed publication.[7]

See also

References

  1. "CrystalExplorer Main Page". crystalexplorer.scb.uwa.edu.au.
  2. Spackman, Mark A.; Jayatilaka, Dylan (21 November 2008). "Hirshfeld surface analysis". CrystEngComm. 11: 19. doi:10.1039/B818330A.
  3. Mackenzie, Campbell F.; Spackman, Peter R.; Jayatilaka, Dylan; Spackman, Mark A. (4 July 2017). "CrystalExplorer model energies and energy frameworks: extension to metal coordination compounds, organic salts, solvates and open-shell systems". IUCrJ. 4 (Pt 5): 575–587. doi:10.1107/S205225251700848X. ISSN 2052-2525. PMC 5600021. PMID 28932404.
  4. "CrystalExplorer: a tool for displaying Hirshfeld surfaces and visualising intermolecular interactions in molecular crystals". Acta Crystallogr. A62: s90. 2006.
  5. "CrystalExplorer 2.1 - CrystalExplorer is a fully-featured molecular crystal visualization tool". software.informer.com. software.informer.com.
  6. "Google Scholar". scholar.google.com.
  7. "CrystalExplorer - Licensing". crystalexplorer.scb.uwa.edu.au.
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