5 research outputs found

    Probing the Nanoscale Heterogeneous Mixing in a High-Performance Polymer Blend.

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    The blend of polyetheretherketone (PEEK) and polybenzimidazole (PBI) produces a high-performance blend (PPB) that is a potential replacement material in several industries due to its high temperature stability and desirable tribological properties. Understanding the nanoscale structure and interface of the two domains of the blend is critical for elucidating the origin of these desirable properties. Whilst achieving the physical characterisation of the domain structures is relatively uncomplicated, the elucidation of structures at the interface presents a significant experimental challenge. In this work, we combine atomic force microscopy (AFM) with an IR laser (AFM-IR) and thermal cantilever probes (nanoTA) to gain insights into the chemical heterogeneity and extent of mixing within the blend structure for the first time. The AFM-IR and nanoTA measurements show that domains in the blend are compositionally different from those of the pure PEEK and PBI polymers, with significant variations observed in a transition region several microns wide in proximity to domain boundary. This strongly points to physical mixing of the two components on a molecular scale at the interface. The versatility intrinsic to the combined methodology employed in this work provides nano- and microscale chemical information that can be used to understand the link between properties of different length scales across a wide range of materials.EP/R511870/

    The Effect of Water on Quinone Redox Mediators in Nonaqueous Li-O2 Batteries.

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    The parasitic reactions associated with reduced oxygen species and the difficulty in achieving the high theoretical capacity have been major issues plaguing development of practical nonaqueous Li-O2 batteries. We hereby address the above issues by exploring the synergistic effect of 2,5-di-tert-butyl-1,4-benzoquinone and H2O on the oxygen chemistry in a nonaqueous Li-O2 battery. Water stabilizes the quinone monoanion and dianion, shifting the reduction potentials of the quinone and monoanion to more positive values (vs Li/Li+). When water and the quinone are used together in a (largely) nonaqueous Li-O2 battery, the cell discharge operates via a two-electron oxygen reduction reaction to form Li2O2, with the battery discharge voltage, rate, and capacity all being considerably increased and fewer side reactions being detected. Li2O2 crystals can grow up to 30 μm, more than an order of magnitude larger than cases with the quinone alone or without any additives, suggesting that water is essential to promoting a solution dominated process with the quinone on discharging. The catalytic reduction of O2 by the quinone monoanion is predominantly responsible for the attractive features mentioned above. Water stabilizes the quinone monoanion via hydrogen-bond formation and by coordination of the Li+ ions, and it also helps increase the solvation, concentration, lifetime, and diffusion length of reduced oxygen species that dictate the discharge voltage, rate, and capacity of the battery. When a redox mediator is also used to aid the charging process, a high-power, high energy density, rechargeable Li-O2 battery is obtained.The authors thank EPSRC-EP/M009521/1 (T.L., G.K., C.P.G.), Innovate UK (T.L.), Darwin Schlumberger Fellowship (T.L.), EU Horizon 2020 GrapheneCore1-No.696656 (G.K., C.P.G.), EPSRC - EP/N024303/1, EP/L019469/1 (N.G.-A., J.T.F.), Royal Society - RG130523 (N.G.-A.), and the European Commission FP7-MC–CIG Funlab, 630162 (N.G.-A.) for research funding

    A quantitative determination of lipid bilayer deposition efficiency using AFM

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    The efficacy of a number of different methods for depositing a dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) lipid bilayer or DMPC-cholesterol (3 : 1) mixed bilayer onto a silicon substrate has been investigated in a quantitative manner using atomic force microscopy (AFM) image analysis to extract surface coverage. Complementary AFM-IR measurements were used to confirm the presence of the lipids. For the Langmuir-Blodgett/Schaefer deposition method at temperatures below the chain-melting transition temperature (T m), a large number of bilayer defects resulted when DMPC was deposited from a water subphase. Addition of calcium ions to the trough led to smaller, more frequent defects, whereas addition of cholesterol to the lipid mixture led to a vast improvement in bilayer coverage. Poor coverage was achieved for deposition at temperatures above T m. Formation of the deposited bilayer from vesicle fusion proved a more reliable method for all systems, with formation of near-complete bilayers within 60 seconds at temperatures above T m, although this method led to a higher probability of multilayer formation and rougher bilayer surfaces
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