19 research outputs found
Tri-component bio-composite materials prepared using an eco-friendly processing route
We report on the blending of three natural polymers, raw cotton, silk and wool, using ionic liquids as the dissolving media. We find that with increased content of wool and silk the thermal degradation temperature of the new bio films increases. This is due to an increase in the hydrogen bond network between the blended polymers. We also investigated the role of the coagulating solvent by coagulating the bio films using water, methanol or isopropanol. Again, we find the coagulating solvent impacts the final properties of the bio films with water shown to coagulated films with the best material properties
Quantum design of ionic liquids for extreme chemical inertness and a new theory of the glass transition
This is the accepted version of a paper subsequently published in the Journal of Solid State Electrochemistry. The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10008-012-1974-2In many modern technologies (such as batteries and supercapacitors), there is a strong need for redox-stable ionic liquids. Experimentally, the stability of ionic liquids can be quantified by the voltage range over which electron tunneling does not occur, but so far, quantum theory has not been applied systematically to this problem. Here, we report the electrochemical reduction of a series of quaternary ammonium cations in the presence of bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (TFSI) anions and use nonadiabatic electron transfer theory to explicate the results. We find that increasing the chain length of the alkyl groups confers improved chemical inertness at all accessible temperatures. Simultaneously, decreasing the symmetry of the quaternary ammonium cations lowers the melting points of the corresponding ionic liquids, in two cases yielding highly inert solvents at room temperature. These are called hexyltriethylammonium TFSI (HTE-TFSI) and butyltrimethylammonium TFSI (BTM-TFSI). Indeed, the latter are two of the most redox-stable solvents in the history of electrochemistry. To gain insight into their properties, very high precision electrical conductivity measurements have been carried out in the range +20 °C to +190 °C. In both cases, the data conform to the Vogel-Tammann-Fulcher (VTF) equation with “six nines” precision (R 2 > 0.999999). The critical temperature for the onset of conductivity coincides with the glass transition temperature T g. This is compelling evidence that ionic liquids are, in fact, softened glasses. Finally, by focusing on the previously unsuspected connection between the molecular degrees of freedom of ionic liquids and their bulk conductivities, we are able to propose a new theory of the glass transition. This should have utility far beyond ionic liquids, in areas as diverse as glassy metals and polymer science