Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 31
Filter
1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(19): 13236-13246, 2024 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38701635

ABSTRACT

Fluids under extreme confinement show characteristics significantly different from those of their bulk counterpart. This work focuses on water confined within the complex cavities of highly hydrophobic metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) at high pressures. A combination of high-pressure intrusion-extrusion experiments with molecular dynamic simulations and synchrotron data reveals that supercritical transition for MOF-confined water takes place at a much lower temperature than in bulk water, ∼250 K below the reference values. This large shifting of the critical temperature (Tc) is attributed to the very large density of confined water vapor in the peculiar geometry and chemistry of the cavities of Cu2tebpz (tebpz = 3,3',5,5'-tetraethyl-4,4'-bipyrazolate) hydrophobic MOF. This is the first time the shift of Tc is investigated for water confined within highly hydrophobic nanoporous materials, which explains why such a large reduction of the critical temperature was never reported before, neither experimentally nor computationally.

2.
Small ; : e2402173, 2024 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39113337

ABSTRACT

Liquid porosimetry experiments reveal a peculiar trend of the intrusion pressure of water in hydrophobic Cu2(3,3',5,5'-tetraethyl-4,4'-bipyrazolate) MOF. At lower temperature (T) range, the intrusion pressure (Pi) increases with T. For higher T values, Pi first reaches a maximum and then decreases. This is at odds with the Young-Laplace law, which for systems showing a continuous decrease of contact angle with T predicts a corresponding reduction of the intrusion pressure. Though the Young-Laplace law is not expected to provide quantitative predictions at the subnanoscale of Cu2(tebpz) pores, the physical intuition suggests that to a reduction of their hydrophobicity corresponds a reduction of the Pi. Molecular dynamics simulations and sychrothron experiments allowed to clarify the mechanism of the peculiar trend of Pi with T. At increasing temperatures the vapor density within the MOF' pores grows significantly, bringing the corresponding partial pressure to ≈5 MPa. This pressure, which is consistent with the shift of Pi observed in liquid porosimetry, represents a threshold to be overcame before intrusion takes place. Beyond some value of temperature, the phenomenon of reduction of hydrophobicity (and water surface tension) dominated over the opposite effect of increase of vapor pressure and Pi inverts its trend with T.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(3): 2440-2448, 2024 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38167891

ABSTRACT

Zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) microporous materials have already been employed in many fields of energetic and environmental interest since the last decade. The commercial scale production of some of these materials makes them more accessible for their implementation in industrial processes; however, their massive synthesis may entail modifications to the preparation protocols, which may result in a loss in the optimization of this process and a drop in the material's quality. This fact may have implications for the performance of these materials during their lifetime, especially when they are used in applications such as energy dissipation, in which they are subjected to several operating cycles under high pressures. This study focuses on ZIF-67, a material that has demonstrated in the past its ability to dissipate energy through the water intrusion-extrusion process under high pressure. Two ZIF-67 samples were synthesized using different protocols, and 2 batches of different qualities (labelled as high quality (HQ) and low quality (LQ)) were obtained and analysed by water porosimetry to study their performance in the intrusion-extrusion process. Unexpectedly, minor structural differences, which are typically neglected especially under production conditions, had a dramatic effect on their performance. The results presented in this study reiterate the importance of quality control with respect to reproducibility of experimental results. In a broader perspective, they are critical to the technology transfer from academia to industry.

4.
Nano Lett ; 23(12): 5430-5436, 2023 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37294683

ABSTRACT

Zeolitic Imidazolate Frameworks (ZIF) find application in storage and dissipation of mechanical energy. Their distinctive properties linked to their (sub)nanometer size and hydrophobicity allow for water intrusion only under high hydrostatic pressure. Here we focus on the popular ZIF-8 material investigating the intrusion mechanism in its nanoscale cages, which is the key to its rational exploitation in target applications. In this work, we used a joint experimental/theoretical approach combining in operando synchrotron experiments during high-pressure intrusion experiments, molecular dynamics simulations, and stochastic models to reveal that water intrusion into ZIF-8 occurs by a cascade filling of connected cages rather than a condensation process as previously assumed. The reported results allowed us to establish structure/function relations in this prototypical microporous material, representing an important step to devise design rules to synthesize porous media.

5.
Nano Lett ; 23(23): 10682-10686, 2023 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38033298

ABSTRACT

Flexible nanoporous materials are of great interest for applications in many fields such as sensors, catalysis, material separation, and energy storage. Of these, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are the most explored thus far. However, tuning their flexibility for a particular application remains challenging. In this work, we explore the effect of the exogenous property of crystallite size on the flexibility of the ZIF-8 MOF. By subjecting hydrophobic ZIF-8 to hydrostatic compression with water, the flexibility of its empty framework and the giant negative compressibility it experiences during water intrusion were recorded via in operando synchrotron irradiation. It was observed that as the crystallite size is reduced to the nanoscale, both flexibility and the negative compressibility of the framework are reduced by ∼25% and ∼15%, respectively. These results pave the way for exogenous tuning of flexibility in MOFs without altering their chemistries.

6.
J Chem Phys ; 159(18)2023 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37955326

ABSTRACT

Hydrophobicity has proven fundamental in an inexhaustible amount of everyday applications. Material hydrophobicity is determined by chemical composition and geometrical characteristics of its macroscopic surface. Surface roughness or texturing enhances intrinsic hydrophilic or hydrophobic characteristics of a material. Here we consider crystalline surfaces presenting molecular-scale texturing typical of crystalline porous materials, e.g., metal-organic frameworks. In particular, we investigate one such material with remarkable hydrophobic qualities, ZIF-8. We show that ZIF-8 hydrophobicity is driven not only by its chemical composition but also its sub-nanoscale surface corrugations, a physical enhancement rare amongst hydrophobes. Studying ZIF-8's hydrophobic properties is challenging as experimentally it is difficult to distinguish between the materials' and the macroscopic corrugations' contributions to the hydrophobicity. The computational contact angle determination is also difficult as the standard "geometric" technique of liquid nanodroplet deposition is prone to many artifacts. Here, we characterise ZIF-8 hydrophobicity via: (i) the "geometric" approach and (ii) the "energetic" method, utilising the Young-Dupré formula and computationally determining the liquid-solid adhesion energy. Both approaches reveal nanoscale Wenzel-like bathing of the corrugated surface. Moreover, we illustrate the importance of surface linker termination in ZIF-8 hydrophobicity, which reduces when varied from sp3 N to sp2 N termination. We also consider halogenated analogues of the methyl-imidazole linker, which promote the transition from nanoWenzel-like to nanoCassie-Baxter-like states, further enhancing surface hydrophobicity. Present results reveal the complex interface physics and chemistry between water and complex porous, molecular crystalline surfaces, providing a hint to tune their hydrophobicity.

7.
Nano Lett ; 22(6): 2164-2169, 2022 03 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35258978

ABSTRACT

Intrusion (wetting)/extrusion (drying) of liquids in/from lyophobic nanoporous systems is key in many fields, including chromatography, nanofluidics, biology, and energy materials. Here we demonstrate that secondary topological features decorating main channels of porous systems dramatically affect the intrusion/extrusion cycle. These secondary features, allowing an unexpected bridging with liquid in the surrounding domains, stabilize the water stream intruding a micropore. This reduces the intrusion/extrusion barrier and the corresponding pressures without altering other properties of the system. Tuning the intrusion/extrusion pressures via subnanometric topological features represents a yet unexplored strategy for designing hydrophobic micropores. Though energy is not the only field of application, here we show that the proposed tuning approach may bring 20-75 MPa of intrusion/extrusion pressure increase, expanding the applicability of hydrophobic microporous materials.


Subject(s)
Nanopores , Water , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Porosity , Pressure , Water/chemistry
8.
Nano Lett ; 21(7): 2848-2853, 2021 Apr 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33759533

ABSTRACT

Materials or systems demonstrating negative linear compressibility (NLC), whose size increases (decreases) in at least one of their dimensions upon compression (decompression) are very rare. Materials demonstrating this effect in all their dimensions, negative volumetric compressibility (NVC), are exceptional. Here, by liquid porosimetry and in situ neutron diffraction, we show that one can achieve exceptional NLC and NVC values by nonwetting liquid intrusion in flexible porous media, namely in the ZIF-8 metal-organic framework (MOF). Atomistic simulations show that the volumetric expansion is due to the presence of liquid in the windows connecting the cavities of ZIF-8. This discovery paves the way for designing novel materials with exceptional NLC and NVC at reasonable pressures suitable for a wide range of applications.

9.
Langmuir ; 37(16): 4827-4835, 2021 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33844556

ABSTRACT

On-demand access to renewable and environmentally friendly energy sources is critical to address current and future energy needs. To achieve this, the development of new mechanisms of efficient thermal energy storage (TES) is important to improve the overall energy storage capacity. Demonstrated here is the ideal concept that the thermal effect of developing a solid-liquid interface between a non-wetting liquid and hydrophobic nanoporous material can store heat to supplement current TES technologies. The fundamental macroscopic property of a liquid's surface entropy and its relationship to its solid surface are one of the keys to predict the magnitude of the thermal effect by the development of the liquid-solid interface in a nanoscale environment-driven through applied pressure. Demonstrated here is this correlation of these properties with the direct measurement of the thermal effect of non-wetting liquids intruding into hydrophobic nanoporous materials. It is shown that the model can resonably predict the heat of intrusion into rigid mesoporous silica and some microporous zeolite when the temperature dependence of the contact angle is applied. Conversely, intrusion into flexible microporous metal-organic frameworks requires further improvement. The reported results with further development have the potential to lead to the development of a new supplementary method and mechanim for TES.

10.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(44): 25388-25400, 2021 Nov 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34751284

ABSTRACT

Largely inspired by nature, hierarchical porous materials are attractive for a wide range of applications as they provide a unique combination of transport and interfacial properties. Hierarchical macro-nanoporous metals (HMNPM) are of particular interest due to their high thermal and electrical conductivities, high volumetric macroporosity as well as their strong capillary forces, and large surface area due to their nanopores. However, tuning the porosity of HMNPMs remains challenging and often requires complex multi-step synthesis methods. Here we demonstrate that controlling the dealloying kinetics of close-to-eutectic alloys allows the selective tuning of the porosity of a hierarchical metal from tens of nanometers to hundreds of micrometers. This was demonstrated by dealloying the Cu-Mg-Zn alloy of close-to-eutectic composition to develop trimodal hierarchical macro-nanoporous copper with an impressive porosity of 94 vol% in the form of macroscopic self-supporting bulk samples. A combination of dealloying experiments and density functional theory calculations indicate that while selective corrosion of chemical phases in the Cu-Mg-Zn alloy is triggered according to their Volta potential, the kinetics can be altered by confinement and non-homogeneity effects. The obtained insights into the kinetics of close-to-eutectic alloy dealloying can be used to develop other hierarchical porous metals with tunable porosity and controlled shape.

11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(48): E10266-E10273, 2017 11 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29138311

ABSTRACT

Heterogeneous systems composed of hydrophobic nanoporous materials and water are capable, depending on their characteristics, of efficiently dissipating (dampers) or storing ("molecular springs") energy. However, it is difficult to predict their properties based on macroscopic theories-classical capillarity for intrusion and classical nucleation theory (CNT) for extrusion-because of the peculiar behavior of water in extreme confinement. Here we use advanced molecular dynamics techniques to shed light on these nonclassical effects, which are often difficult to investigate directly via experiments, owing to the reduced dimensions of the pores. The string method in collective variables is used to simulate, without artifacts, the microscopic mechanism of water intrusion and extrusion in the pores, which are thermally activated, rare events. Simulations reveal three important nonclassical effects: the nucleation free-energy barriers are reduced eightfold compared with CNT, the intrusion pressure is increased due to nanoscale confinement, and the intrusion/extrusion hysteresis is practically suppressed for pores with diameters below 1.2 nm. The frequency and size dependence of hysteresis exposed by the present simulations explains several experimental results on nanoporous materials. Understanding physical phenomena peculiar to nanoconfined water paves the way for a better design of nanoporous materials for energy applications; for instance, by decreasing the size of the nanopores alone, it is possible to change their behavior from dampers to molecular springs.

12.
Chemphyschem ; 17(21): 3359-3364, 2016 Nov 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27442186

ABSTRACT

A molecular spring formed by a hydrophobic metal-organic framework Cu2 (tebpz) (tebpz=3,3',5,5'-tetraethyl-4,4'-bipyrazolate) and water is presented. This nanoporous heterogeneous lyophobic system (HLS) has exceptional properties compared to numerous reported systems of such type in terms of stability, efficiency, and operating pressure. Mechanical and thermal energetic characteristics as well as stability of the system are discussed and compared in detail with those of other previously reported HLS.

13.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(6): 7604-7616, 2024 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38300737

ABSTRACT

The properties of nanoconfined fluids are important for a broad range of natural and engineering systems. In particular, wetting/dewetting of hydrophobic nanoporous materials is crucial due to their broad applicability for molecular separation and liquid purification; energy storage, conversion, recuperation, and dissipation; for catalysis, chromatography, and so on. In this work, a rapid, orchestrated, and spontaneous dipole reorientation was observed in hydrophobic nanotubes of various pore sizes d (7.9-16.5 Å) via simulations. This phenomenon leads to the fragmentation of water clusters in the narrow nanopores (d = 7.9, 10 Å) and strongly affects dewetting through cluster repulsion. The cavitation in these pores has an electrostatic origin. The dependence of hydrogen-bonded network properties on the tube aperture is obtained and is used to explain wetting (intrusion)-dewetting (extrusion) hysteresis. Computer simulations and experimental data demonstrate that d equals ca. 12.5 Å is a threshold between a nonhysteretic (spring) behavior, where intrusion-extrusion is reversible, and a hysteretic one (shock absorber), where hysteresis is prominent. This work suggests that water clustering and the electrostatic nature of cavitation are important factors that can be effectively exploited for controlling the wetting/dewetting of nanoporous materials.

14.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 128(29): 12036-12045, 2024 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39081555

ABSTRACT

Forced wetting (intrusion) and spontaneous dewetting (extrusion) of hydrophobic/lyophobic nanoporous materials by water/nonwetting liquid are of great importance for a broad span of technological and natural systems such as shock-absorbers, molecular springs, separation, chromatography, ion channels, nanofluidics, and many more. In most of these cases, the process of intrusion-extrusion is not complete due to the stochastic nature of external stimuli under realistic operational conditions. However, understanding of these partial processes is limited, as most of the works are focused on an idealized complete intrusion-extrusion cycle. In this work, we show an experimental system operating under partial intrusion/extrusion conditions and present a simple model that captures its main features. We rationalize these operational conditions in terms of the pore entrance and cavity size distributions of the material, which control the range of intrusion/extrusion pressures.

15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39178309

ABSTRACT

Fluorination is one of the most efficient and universal strategies to increase the hydrophobicity of materials and consequently their water stability. Zeolitic-imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs), which have limited stability in aqueous media and even lower stability when synthesized on a nanometric scale, can greatly benefit from the incorporation of fluorine atoms, not only to improve their stability but also to provide additional properties. Herein, we report the preparation of two different fluorinated ZIFs through a simple and scalable approach by using mixed ligands [2-methylimidazole, as a common ligand, and 4-(4-fluorophenyl)-1H-imidazole (monofluorinated linker) or 2-methyl-5-(trifluoromethyl)-1H-imidazole (trifluorinated linker) as a dopant], demonstrating the high versatility of the synthetic method developed to incorporate different fluorine-containing imidazole-based ligands. Second, we demonstrate for the first time that these nanoscale fluorinated ZIFs outperform the pristine ZIF-8 for water intrusion/extrusion, i.e., for storing mechanical energy via forced intrusion of nonwetting water due to the improved hydrophobicity and modified framework dynamics. Moreover, we also show that by varying the nature of the F-imidazole ligand, the performance of the resulting ZIFs, including the pressure thresholds and stored/dissipated energy, can be finely tuned, thus opening the path for the design of a library of fluorine-modified ZIFs with unique behavior.

16.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(4): 5286-5293, 2024 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38258752

ABSTRACT

Wetting of a solid by a liquid is relevant for a broad range of natural and technological processes. This process is complex and involves the generation of heat, which is still poorly understood especially in nanoconfined systems. In this article, scanning transitiometry was used to measure and evaluate the pressure-driven heat of intrusion of water into solid ZIF-8 powder within the temperature range of 278.15-343.15 K. The conditions examined included the presence and absence of atmospheric gases, basic pH conditions, solid sample origins, and temperature. Simultaneously with these experiments, molecular dynamics simulations were conducted to elucidate the changing behavior of water as it enters into ZIF-8. The results are rationalized within a temperature-dependent thermodynamic cycle. This cycle describes the temperature-dependent process of ZIF-8 filling, heating, emptying, and cooling with respect to the change of internal energy of the cycle from the calculated change in the specific heat capacity of the system. At 298 K the experimental heat of intrusion per gram of ZIF-8 was found to be -10.8 ± 0.8 J·g-1. It increased by 19.2 J·g-1 with rising temperature to 343 K which is in a reasonable match with molecular dynamic simulations that predicted 16.1 J·g-1 rise. From these combined experiments, the role of confined water in heat of intrusion of ZIF-8 is further clarified.

17.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 15(4): 880-887, 2024 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38241150

ABSTRACT

Heat and the work of compression/decompression are among the basic properties of thermodynamic systems. Being relevant to many industrial and natural processes, this thermomechanical energy is challenging to tune due to fundamental boundaries for simple fluids. Here via direct experimental and atomistic observations, we demonstrate, for fluids consisting of nanoporous material and a liquid, one can overcome these limitations and noticeably affect both thermal and mechanical energies of compression/decompression exploiting preferential intrusion of water from aqueous solutions into subnanometer pores. We hypothesize that this effect is due to the enthalpy of dilution manifesting itself as the aqueous solution concentrates upon the preferential intrusion of pure water into pores. We suggest this genuinely subnanoscale phenomenon can be potentially a strategy for controlling the thermomechanical energy of microporous liquids and tuning the wetting/dewetting heat of nanopores relevant to a variety of natural and technological processes spanning from biomedical applications to oil-extraction and renewable energy.

18.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 5076, 2024 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38871721

ABSTRACT

Although coveted in applications, few materials expand when subject to compression or contract under decompression, i.e., exhibit negative compressibility. A key step to achieve such counterintuitive behaviour is the destabilisations of (meta)stable equilibria of the constituents. Here, we propose a simple strategy to obtain negative compressibility exploiting capillary forces both to precompress the elastic material and to release such precompression by a threshold phenomenon - the reversible formation of a bubble in a hydrophobic flexible cavity. We demonstrate that the solid part of such metastable elastocapillary systems displays negative compressibility across different scales: hydrophobic microporous materials, proteins, and millimetre-sized laminae. This concept is applicable to fields such as porous materials, biomolecules, sensors and may be easily extended to create unexpected material susceptibilities.

19.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(12): 4451-7, 2013 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23407667

ABSTRACT

Recently {lyophobic porous powders + liquid} systems were proposed to be used for nontraditional energy storage and conversion purposes. This article reports the experimental study of the mechanical behavior, within the pressure-volume (PV) diagram, of the {hydrophobic silicalite-1 + water} system in the temperature range 10-80 °C. Repeated recordings of PV-isotherms and thermal effects of the repulsive clathrate during successive compression-decompression runs were performed using scanning transitiometry. An unexpected steady decline in the intrusion-extrusion pressure and volume of embedded water was found during the forced (repeated) intrusion of water into the pores of silicalite-1 and its spontaneous extrusion at constant temperature. A discussion of possible reasons of unconventional behavior of these heterogeneous systems as well as a thermodynamic analysis is presented.

20.
ACS Omega ; 8(29): 26136-26146, 2023 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37521663

ABSTRACT

Thermal management protects against external agents and increases the lifetime and performance of the devices in which it is implemented. Because of their ability to store and release a high amount of energy at a nearly constant temperature, phase change materials (PCMs) are promising thermoregulatory materials. Thus, the manufacture of PVDF fibers containing PCMs has advantages since PVDF is already used in elements that are susceptible to thermal management as a binder in batteries or as a base material for fabrics. This work presents a simple, versatile, in situ, cost-effective, and easy-to-scale-up method to produce PVDF-based fibers containing paraffin RT-28HC for thermal management. To achieve that goal, the microfluidic approach of coaxial flows was simplified to gravity-aided laminar jet injection into a bulk fluid, where fibers were produced by the solvent extraction mechanism. With this methodology, hollow PVDF fibers and core-shell PVDF fibers containing paraffin RT-28HC have been produced. The proposed approach resulted in fibers with up to 98 J/g of latent heat, with a hierarchical porous structure. SEM study of the fiber morphology has shown that PCM is in the form of slugs along the fibers. Such PCM distribution is maintained until the first melting cycle, when molten PCM spreads within the fiber under capillary forces, which was observed by an infrared camera. Manufactured composite fibers have shown low thermal conductivity and high elasticity, which suggest their potential application as a thermal insulation material with thermal buffer properties. Leakage tests revealed outstanding retention capacity with only 3.5% mass loss after 1000 melting/crystallization cycles. Finally, tensile tests were carried out to evaluate the mechanical properties of the fibers before and after thermal cycling.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL