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Over the years, numerous experimental and theoretical efforts have been dedicated to investigating the mysteries of water and determining its new unexplored physical properties. Despite this, high-pressure studies of water and aqueous mixtures close to the glass transition still represent an unknown area of research. Herein, we address a fundamental issue: the validity of the density scaling concept for fast water dynamics. For this purpose, we performed ambient and high-pressure dielectric measurements of a supercooled equimolar aqueous mixture of an acidic ionic liquid. All isothermal and isobaric relaxation data describing the time scale of charge transport (τσ) and fast dynamics within the water clusters (τν) reveal visual evidence of a liquid-glass transition. Furthermore, both relaxation processes satisfy the ργ/T scaling concept with a single exponent γ = 0.58. Thus, the scaling exponent is a state-point-independent parameter for the dynamics of water clusters confined in ionic liquid investigated in the pressure range up to 300 MPa.
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The present study was designed to investigate the physical stability of three organic materials with similar chemical structures. The examined compounds revealed completely different crystallization tendencies in their supercooled liquid states and were classified into three distinct classes based on their tendency to crystallize. (S)-4-Benzyl-2-oxazolidinone easily crystallizes during cooling from the melt; (S)-4-Benzylthiazolidine-2-thione does not crystallize during cooling from the melt, but crystallizes easily during subsequent reheating above Tg; and (S)-4-Benzyloxazolidine-2-thione does not crystallize either during cooling from the melt or during reheating. Such different tendencies to crystallize are observed despite the very similar chemical structures of the compounds, which only differ in oxide or sulfur atoms in one of their rings. We also studied the isothermal crystallization kinetics of the materials that were shown to transform into a crystalline state. Molecular dynamics and thermal properties were thoroughly investigated using broadband dielectric spectroscopy, as well as conventional and temperature-modulated differential scanning calorimetry in the wide temperature range. It was found that all three glass formers have the same dynamic fragility (m = 93), calculated directly from dielectric structural relaxation times. This result verifies that dynamic fragility is not related to the tendency to crystallize. In addition, thermodynamic fragility predictions were also made using calorimetric data. It was found that the thermodynamic fragility evaluated based on the width of the glass transition, observed in the temperature dependence of heat capacity, correlates best with the tendency to crystallize.
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Tionas , Cristalização/métodos , Transição de Fase , Temperatura , Termodinâmica , Varredura Diferencial de CalorimetriaRESUMO
One of the challenging problems related to the liquid-glass transition phenomenon is establishing a link between the character of intermolecular interactions and the behavior of molecular dynamics. Introducing the density scaling concept, according to which dynamic quantities, e.g., viscosity or structural relaxation time (τ_{α}) measured at different thermodynamic conditions are expressed as a single universal curve if plotted against ρ^{γ}/T, led to significant progress in solving this problem since the scaling exponent γ defines the steepness of the repulsive part of the intermolecular potential. Herein, we found that relaxation dynamics of van der Waals and H-bonding glass formers, for which the Kirkwood factor (g_{K}) is an isomorph-invariant quantity, satisfy an alternative scaling, logτ_{α} vs T(Δϵ_{s}T)^{-γ}. As a result, the exponent γ is determined from the temperature and pressure evolutions of τ_{α} and dielectric relaxation strength Δϵ-both obtained in a single dielectric experiment, which makes the γ coefficient to be accessed in the future for an extensive database of glass-forming liquids.
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Ionic liquids (ILs), revealing a tendency to form self-assembled nanostructures, have emerged as promising materials in various applications, especially in energy storage and conversion. Despite multiple reports discussing the effect of structural factors and external thermodynamic variables on ion organization in a liquid state, little is known about the charge-transport mechanism through the self-assembled nanostructures and how it changes at elevated pressure. To address these issues, we chose three amphiphilic ionic liquids containing the same tetra(alkyl)phosphonium cation and anions differing in size and shape, i.e., thiocyanate [SCN]-, dicyanamide [DCA]-, and tricyanomethanide [TCM]-. From ambient pressure dielectric and mechanical experiments, we found that charge transport of all three examined ILs is viscosity-controlled at high temperatures. On the other hand, ion diffusion is much faster than structural dynamics in a nanostructured supercooled liquid (at T < 210 ± 3 K), which constitutes the first example of conductivity independent from viscosity in neat aprotic ILs. High-pressure measurements and MD simulations reveal that the created nanostructures depend on the anion size and can be modified by compression. For small anions, increasing pressure shapes immobile alkyl chains into lamellar-type phases, leading to increased anisotropic diffusivity of anions through channels. Bulky anions drive the formation of interconnected phases with continuous 3D curvature, which render ion transport independent of pressure. This work offers insight into the design of high-density electrolytes with percolating conductive phases providing efficient ion flow.
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Phenyl alcohols (PhAs) are an interesting class of materials, for which the dielectric response reveals only the presence of single prominent Debye-like (D) relaxation, interpreted as a genuine structural (α) process. Herein, we have performed dielectric and mechanical measurements on a series of PhAs characterized by the varying length of the alkyl chain and found that this interpretation is not valid. Analysis of the derivative of the real part of the complex permittivity together with the mechanical and light scattering data clearly indicated that the prominent dielectric D-like peak is actually a superposition of both cross-correlation between dipole-dipole (D-mode) and self-dipole correlation (α-process) and that the distinguished α-mode exhibits a similar ("generic") shape of PhAs independently to their molecular weight and applied experimental technique. Therefore, the data presented herein contribute to the whole discussion focused on the dielectric response function and universality (or diversity) of the spectral shape of the α-mode of polar liquids.
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In this paper, we have examined a series of phenyl-substituted primary monohydroxy alcohols (phenyl alcohols, PhAs), from ethanol to hexanol by means of dielectric and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopies supported by the mechanical investigations. The combination of both dielectric and mechanical data allows calculation of the energy barrier, Ea, for dissociation by the Rubinstein approach developed to describe the dynamical properties of self-assembling macromolecules. It was observed that the determined activation energy remains constant, |Ea,RM| â¼ 12.9-14.2 kJ mol-1, regardless of the molecular weight of the examined material. Surprisingly, the obtained values agree very well with Ea of the dissociation process determined from the FTIR data analysed within the van't Hoff relationship, where Ea,vH â¼ 9.13-13.64 kJ mol-1. Thus, the observed agreement between Ea determined by both applied approaches clearly implies that in the case of the examined series of PhAs, the dielectric Debye-like process is governed by the association-dissociation phenomenon as proposed by the transient chain model.
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The existence of more than one liquid state in a single-component system remains the most intriguing physical phenomenon. Herein, we explore the effect of cation self-assembly on ion dynamics in the vicinity of liquid-liquid and liquid-glass transition of tetraalkyl phosphonium ([Pmmm,n]+, m = 4, 6; n = 2-14) ionic liquids. We found that nonpolar local domains formed by 14-carbon alkyl chains are crucial in obtaining two supercooled states of different dynamics within a single ionic liquid. Although the nano-ordering, confirmed by Raman spectroscopy, still occurs for shorter alkyl chains (m = 6, n < 14), it does not bring calorimetric evidence of LLT. Instead, it results in peculiar behavior of ion dynamics near the liquid-glass transition and 20-times smaller size of the dynamic heterogeneity compared to imidazolium ionic liquids. These results represent a crucial step toward understanding the nature of the LLT phenomenon and offer insight into the design of efficient electrolytes based on ionic liquids revealing self-assembly behavior.
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Polymerized ionic liquids (PILs) are typically single-ion conductors, where one kind of ionic species is either placed as the pendant group to the chain (pendant PILs) or directly incorporated into the polymeric backbone (backbone PILs). This paper compares the thermodynamics, ionic dynamics, and mechanical properties of pendant and backbone PILs. The results indicate that near the glass transition, the energy barrier for ion hopping is much lower for pendant PIL while the backbone PIL shows a much stronger sensitivity to pressure. At the same time, a free-volume based model was proposed here to understand the ion dynamics of both studied PILs at high-pressure conditions. The determined critical volume, quantifying the minimal volume required for ion hopping, of the pendant PIL is significantly reduced compared to the backbone PIL, which is most likely the reason for the enhanced ionic conductivity of the pendant PIL near the glass transition. We found that the proposed model is equivalent to the commonly used pressure counterpart of the Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann equation.
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Liquid-liquid transition (LLT) between two disordered phases of single-component material remains one of the most intriguing physical phenomena. Here, we report a first-order LLT in a series of ionic liquids containing trihexyl(tetradecyl)phosphonium cation [P666,14]+ and anions of different sizes and shapes, providing an insight into the structure-property relationships governing LLT. In addition to calorimetric proof of LLT, we report that ion dynamics exhibit anomalous behavior during the LLT, i.e., the conductivity relaxation times (τσ) are dramatically elongated, and their distribution becomes broader. This peculiar behavior is induced by isobaric cooling and isothermal compression, with the τσ(TLL,PLL) constant for a given system. The latter observation proves that LLT, in analogy to liquid-glass transition, has an isochronal character. Finally, the magnitude of discontinuity in a specific volume at LLT was estimated using the Clausius-Clapeyron equation.
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Salt preparation via a solid-state reaction offers a solution to challenges posed by current pharmaceutical research, which include combining development of novel forms of active pharmaceutical ingredients with greener, sustainable synthesis. This work investigated in detail the mechanism of salt formation between propranolol (PRO) and capric acid (CAP) and explored the solid eutectic phases comprising this salt, propranolol caprate (PRC). The salt structure was solved by X-ray diffraction, and the properties in the crystalline and supercooled states were fully characterised using thermal analysis, nuclear magnetic resonance, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and broadband dielectric spectroscopy (BDS). PRC forms via a submerged eutectic phase composed of PRO and CAP, below room temperature, by mechanochemistry without an extra input of energy. Two other solid eutectic phases are composed of PRC and either CAP or PRO, at 0.28 and 0.82 mol fraction of PRO, respectively. BDS indicated that the supercooled PRC has ionic character, whereas the supercooled PRC-PRO eutectic had predominantly non-ionic properties despite comprising the salt. In conclusion, knowledge of the mechanism of formation of multicomponent systems can help in designing more sustainable pharmaceutical processes.
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Nonequilibrium processes, including physical aging, belong to the most challenging phenomena of glassy dynamics. One of the fundamental problems that needs clarification is the effect of material polarity on the time scale of the structural recovery of glass. The importance of this issue arises from practical applications and recent findings suggesting a substantial contribution of dipole-dipole interactions to the dielectric permittivity spectra of polar glass-formers. Herein, we use dielectric spectroscopy to investigate structural relaxation and aging dynamics of highly polar glass-former 4-[(4,4,5,5,5-pentafluoropentoxy)methyl]-1,3-dioxolan-2-one (FPC), a derivative of propylene carbonate with εs = 180 and µ = 5.1. We show that εâ³(tage) data of FPC at Tage < Tg reveal complex behavior resulting from considerable cross-correlation effects. Namely, two characteristic aging time scales, reflecting the evolution of cross-correlation mode and generic structural relaxation toward equilibrium, are obtained at a given Tage. Furthermore, a single stretched exponential behavior of εâ³(tage) has been received for weakly polar carvedilol with negligible dipole-dipole interactions.
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The use of acidic ionic liquids and solids as electrolytes in fuel cells is an emerging field due to their efficient proton conductivity and good thermal stability. Despite multiple reports describing conducting properties of acidic ILs, little is known on the charge-transport mechanism in the vicinity of liquid-glass transition and the structural factors governing the proton hopping. To address these issues, we studied two acidic imidazolium-based ILs with the same cation, however, different anions-bulk tosylate vs small methanesulfonate. High-pressure dielectric studies of anhydrous and water-saturated materials performed in the close vicinity of Tg have revealed significant differences in the charge-transport mechanism in these two systems being undetectable at ambient conditions. Thereby, we demonstrated the effect of molecular architecture on proton hopping, being crucial in the potential electrochemical applications of acidic ILs.
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Molecular dynamics of ionic liquids in an electric field can be decomposed into contributions from translational motions of ions, rotational motions of permanent dipoles and - in the case of ions equipped with long alkyl-chains - motions of ionic aggregates. The discrimination of these contributions in the dielectric spectrum is quite involved, resulting in numerous controversies in the literature. Here, we use dielectric spectroscopy at ambient and elevated pressures of up to 550 MPa to monitor the changes of the observed processes in five supercooled ionic liquids with octyl-chains independent of pressure and temperature. In most of the ionic liquids under investigation two dynamical processes are observed, one of them is identified as the ion hopping process, which we describe by the MIGRATION model. It turns out that this process is closely connected to the glass transition step as measured by differential scanning calorimetry. Concerning the second process, we rule out motions of aggregated ions to be its origin by comparison of our results with X-ray scattering literature data at elevated pressure. Instead, we tentatively ascribe it to dipolar reorientations and show that the dielectric strength of this slow process decreases as a function of increasing relaxation time, i.e. for decreasing temperatures and increasing pressures. We compare this behavior with literature data of other ion conducting systems and discuss its microscopic origin.
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The physiochemical properties of acidic or basic active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) can be optimised by forming salts with different counterions. The aim of this work was to synthesise a novel salt of propranolol (PRO) using sebacic acid (SEBA) as the counterion and to gain mechanistic understanding of not only the salt formation, but also its eutectic phase formation with SEBA. Thermal analysis showed a solid-state reaction occurring between PRO and SEBA leading to the formation of dipropranolol sebacate (DPS) melting at app. 170 °C and the eutectic composed of DPS and SEBA melting at app. 103 °C, comprising 0.33 mol fraction of PRO as determined by the Tammann plot. X-ray diffraction and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) confirmed the identity of the new multicomponent phases of PRO. DPS can be conveniently obtained by heat-induced crystallisation, grinding and conventional solvent crystallisation. Detailed analysis by FTIR revealed H-bond interactions between DPS and SEBA at the inter-phase in the eutectic. Bravais, Friedel, Donnay and Harker crystal morphology coupled with full interaction maps analysis allowed to understand further the nature of interactions which led to formation of the eutectic phase. This work contributes to furthering research on multicomponent pharmaceutical systems to harness their full potential.
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Propranolol , Varredura Diferencial de Calorimetria , Cristalização , Solventes , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de Fourier , Difração de Raios XRESUMO
In this work, we show how the structure and intermolecular interactions affect the dynamic heterogeneity of aprotic ionic liquids. Using calorimetric data for 30 ionic samples, we examine the influence of the strength of van der Waals and Coulombic interactions on dynamic heterogeneity. We show that the dynamic length scale of spatially heterogeneous dynamics decreases significantly with decreasing intermolecular distances. Additionally, we assume that the magnitude of the number of dynamically correlated molecules at the liquid-glass transition temperature can be treated as an indicator for a dynamical crossover.
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We examined the behavior of poly(mercaptopropyl)methylsiloxane (PMMS), characterized by a polymer chain backbone of alternate silicon and oxygen atoms substituted by a polar pendant group able to form hydrogen bonds (-SH moiety), by means of infrared (FTIR) and dielectric (BDS) spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and rheology. We observed that the examined PMMS forms relatively efficient hydrogen bonds leading to the association of chains in the form of ordered lamellar-like hydrogen-bonded nanodomains. Moreover, the recorded mechanical and dielectric spectra revealed the presence of two relaxation processes. A direct comparison of collected data and relaxation times extracted from two experimental techniques, BDS and rheology, indicates that they monitor different types of the mobility of PMMS macromolecules. Our mechanical measurements revealed the presence of Rouse modes connected to the chain dynamics (slow process) and segmental relaxation (a faster process), whereas in the dielectric loss spectra we observed two relaxation processes related most likely to either the association-dissociation phenomenon within lamellar-like self-assemblies or the sub-Rouse mode (α'-slower process) and segmental (α-faster process) dynamics. Data presented herein allow a better understanding of the peculiar dynamical properties of polysiloxanes and associating polymers having strongly polar pendant moieties.
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The glassy, supercooled, and normal liquid states of the 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium tricyanomethanide series [CnC1im][TCM] (n = 2, 4, 6, 8, and 16) were investigated by dielectric and mechanical (rheological) experiments supplemented by X-ray diffraction. The conductivity relaxation was found to be accompanied by a pronounced secondary relaxation. However, based on ambient and high-pressure results as well as the coupling model, we assumed that the latter one can not be classified as Johari-Goldstein relaxation. Moreover, the studies on the nanoscale organization of ionic liquids indicated that 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium tricyanomethanide ILs begin to form nanoscale aggregates when the alkyl chain of the cation has six carbon atoms.
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In this paper, we investigate the interplay between the dynamics and thermodynamics of aprotic ionic liquids in the supercooled and normal liquid states. For this purpose, the conductivity dynamic modulus Mσp-T, being defined as the ratio of activation energy (Ep) and activation volume (VT), and its relation to bulk modulus BT under isobaric and isothermal conditions is examined. We found that both isobaric cooling and isothermal compression lead to an increase in Mσp-T. Specifically, Mσp-T(P)T rises linearly similar to BT. Consequently, a direct linear relationship between Mσp-T(P)T and BT is established under isothermal conditions.
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Electrode-polymer interfaces dictate many of the properties of thin films such as capacitance, the electric field experienced by polymers, and charge transport. However, structure and dynamics of charged polymers near electrodes remain poorly understood, especially in the high concentration limit representative of the melts. To develop an understanding of electric field-induced transformations of electrode-polymer interfaces, we have studied electrified interfaces of an imidazolium-based polymerized ionic liquid (PolyIL) using combinations of broadband dielectric spectroscopy, specular neutron reflectivity, and simulations based on the Rayleigh's dissipation function formalism. Overall, we obtained the camel-shaped dependence of the capacitance on applied voltage, which originated from the responses of an adsorbed polymer layer to applied voltages. This work provides additional insights related to the effects of molecular weight in affecting structure and properties of electrode-polymer interfaces, which are essential for designing next-generation energy storage and harvesting devices.
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Ionic liquid (IL) properties, such as high ionic conductivity under ambient conditions combined with nontoxicity and nonflammability, make them important materials for future technologies. Despite high ion conductivity desired for battery applications, cation transport numbers in ILs are not sufficient enough to attain high power density batteries. Thus, developing novel approaches directed toward improvement of cation transport properties is required for the application of ILs in energy-storing devices. In this effort, we used various experimental techniques to demonstrate that the strategy of mixing ILs with ultrasmall (1.8 nm) nanoparticles (NPs) resulted in melt-processable composites with improved transport numbers for cations at room temperature. This significant enhancement in the transport number was attributed to the specific chemistry of NPs exhibiting a weaker cation and stronger anion coordination at ambient temperature. At high temperature, significantly weakened NP-anion associations promoted a liquid-like behavior of composites, highlighting the melt-processability of these composites. These results show that designing a reversible dynamic noncovalent NP-anion association controlled by the temperature may constitute an effective strategy to control ion diffusion. Our studies provide fundamental insights into mechanisms driving the charge transport and offer practical guidance for the design of melt-processable composites with an improved cation transport number under ambient conditions.