6 research outputs found
Photoresponsive Liquid Crystalline Epoxy Networks with Shape Memory Behavior and Dynamic Ester Bonds
Functional
polymers are intelligent materials that can respond to a variety of
external stimuli. However, these materials have not yet found widespread
real world applications because of the difficulties in fabrication
and the limited number of functional building blocks that can be incorporated
into a material. Here, we demonstrate a simple route to incorporate
three functional building blocks (azobenzene chromophores, liquid
crystals, and dynamic covalent bonds) into an epoxy-based liquid crystalline
network (LCN), in which an azobenzene-based epoxy monomer is polymerized
with an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid to create exchangeable ester bonds
that can be thermally activated. All three functional building blocks
exhibited good compatibility, and the resulting materials exhibits
various photomechanical, shape memory, and self-healing properties
because of the azobenzene molecules, liquid crystals, and dynamic
ester bonds, respectively
Controlled Shape Memory Behavior of a Smectic Main-Chain Liquid Crystalline Elastomer
A smectic
main-chain liquid crystalline elastomer (LCE), with controlled
shape memory behavior, is synthesized by polymerizing a biphenyl-based
epoxy monomer with an aliphatic carboxylic acid curing agent. Microstructures
of the LCEs, including their liquid crystallinity and cross-linking
density, are modified by adjusting the stoichiometric ratio of the
reactants to tailor the thermomechanical properties and shape memory
behavior of the material. Thermal and liquid crystalline properties
of the LCEs, characterized using differential scanning calorimetry
and dynamic mechanical analysis, and structural analysis, performed
using small-angle and wide-angle X-ray scattering, show that liquid
crystallinity, cross-linking density, and network rigidity are strongly
affected by the stoichiometry of the curing reaction. With appropriate
structural modifications it is possible to tune the thermal, dynamic
mechanical, and thermomechanical properties as well as the shape memory
and thermal degradation behavior of LCEs
Studies on Supercapacitor Electrode Material from Activated Lignin-Derived Mesoporous Carbon
We synthesized mesoporous carbon
from pre-cross-linked lignin gel
impregnated with a surfactant as the pore-forming agent and then activated
the carbon through physical and chemical methods to obtain activated
mesoporous carbon. The activated mesoporous carbons exhibited 1.5-
to 6-fold increases in porosity with a maximum BrunauerâEmmettâTeller
(BET) specific surface area of 1148 m<sup>2</sup>/g and a pore volume
of 1.0 cm<sup>3</sup>/g. Both physical and chemical activation enhanced
the mesoporosity along with significant microporosity. Plots of cyclic
voltammetric data with the capacitor electrode made from these carbons
showed an almost rectangular curve depicting the behavior of ideal
double-layer capacitance. Although the pristine mesoporous carbon
exhibited a range of surface-area-based capacitance similar to that
of other known carbon-based supercapacitors, activation decreased
the surface-area-based specific capacitance and enhanced the gravimetric
specific capacitance of the mesoporous carbons. A vertical tail in
the lower-frequency domain of the Nyquist plot provided additional
evidence of good supercapacitor behavior for the activated mesoporous
carbons. We have modeled the equivalent circuit of the Nyquist plot
with the help of two constant phase elements (CPE). Our work demonstrated
that biomass-derived mesoporous carbon materials continue to show
potential for use in specific electrochemical applications
Controlled Assembly of Lignocellulosic Biomass Components and Properties of Reformed Materials
Reforming
whole lignocellulosic biomass into value-added materials
has yet to be achieved mainly due to the infusible nature of biomass
and its recalcitrance to dissolve in common organic solvents. Recently,
the solubility of biomass in ionic liquids (ILs) has been explored
to develop all-lignocellulosic materials; however, efficient dissolution
and therefore production of value-added materials with desired mechanical
properties remain a challenge. This article presents an approach to
producing high-performance lignocellulosic films from hybrid poplar
wood. An autohydrolysis step that removes â€50% of the hemicellulose
fraction is performed to enhance biomass solvation in 1-ethyl-3-methyl
imidazolium acetate ([C2mim]Â[OAc]). The resulting biomassâIL
solution is then cast into free-standing films using different coagulating
solvents, yet preserving the polymeric nature of the biomass constituents.
Methanol coagulated films exhibit a cocontinuous 3D-network structure
with dispersed domains of less than 100 nm. The consolidated films
with controllable morphology and structural order demonstrate tensile
properties better than those of quasi-isotropic wood. The methods
for producing these biomass derivatives have potential for fabricating
novel green materials with superior performance from woody and grassy
biomass
Evidence for the Formation of Nitrogen-Rich Platinum and Palladium Nitride Nanoparticles
We report evidence for the formation
of nitrogen-rich precious
metal nanoparticles (Pt, Pd) prepared by reactive sputtering of the
pure metal in a N<sub>2</sub> plasma. The composition of the nanoparticles
varies as a function of particle size and growth conditions. For the
smallest particles the nitrogen content appears to be as high as 6.7
N atoms for each Pd atom or 5.9 N atoms for each Pt atom whereas bulk
films have nominal compositions of Pt<sub>7.3</sub>N and Pd<sub>2.5</sub>N. The unusually large N content in the nanoparticles is balanced
with H. The nanoparticles are metastable in air and moisture, slowly
decomposing over several years. The catalytic properties of these
N-rich nanoparticles were accessed by rotating disk electrode electrochemical
studies, the liquid phase oxidation of benzyl alcohol, and gas phase
CO oxidation, and support the experimental evidence for the materials
composition
Surface-Induced Orientation Control of CuPc Molecules for the Epitaxial Growth of Highly Ordered Organic Crystals on Graphene
The epitaxial growth and preferred
molecular orientation of copper
phthalocyanine (CuPc) molecules on graphene has been systematically
investigated and compared with growth on Si substrates, demonstrating
the role of surface-mediated interactions in determining molecular
orientation. X-ray scattering and diffraction, scanning tunneling
microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and first-principles theoretical
calculations were used to show that the nucleation, orientation, and
packing of CuPc molecules on films of graphene are fundamentally different
compared to those grown on Si substrates. Interfacial dipole interactions
induced by charge transfer between CuPc molecules and graphene are
shown to epitaxially align the CuPc molecules in a face-on orientation
in a series of ordered superstructures. At high temperatures, CuPc
molecules lie flat with respect to the graphene substrate to form
strip-like CuPc crystals with micrometer sizes containing monocrystalline
grains. Such large epitaxial crystals may potentially enable improvement
in the device performance of organic thin films, wherein charge transport,
exciton diffusion, and dissociation are currently limited by grain
size effects and molecular orientation