10–13 Oct 2022
Europe/Paris timezone

Periodic Mesoporous Organosilicas as Model Host-Compounds to Study Water in Nanoconfinement

11 Oct 2022, 17:00
2h
Poster Contributions Poster session

Speaker

Prof. Patrick Huber (TUHH Hamburg University of Technology, Institute for Materials and X-Ray Physics, DESY Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron)

Description

Periodic mesoporous organosilicas (PMOs) have attracted attention in many research fields, for example catalysis, energy storage or light harvesting.
PMO materials are obtained by a sol-gel process from organo-bridged alkoxysilanes ([(R’O)3-Si-R-Si(OR’)3]; R: incorporated organic-bridging group), in presence of structure-directing agents (SDAs). This leads to well-ordered inorganic-organic hybrid systems with cylindrical nanopores, whose diameter (usually in the range from approx. 3 to 10 nm) can be easily adjusted by varying the SDAs. If suitable precursors are used (rigid, π electron-rich) crystal-like pore walls are obtained, in which an alternating sequence of inorganic and organic domains parallel to the pore axis are present. These features make PMOs ideal candidates for studying the behavior of water and other liquids in a nanoconfined environment.
Here, we study the behavior of water in these systems using quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS), water vapor physisorption, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). In particular, the fluorinated systems are of high interest, due to their very hydrophobic nature and because of other well-known anomalous properties of fluorine.

This work was conducted in the frame of the DFG-ANR collaborative project (“Project NanoLiquids”) as well as the LFF-project (“water in confinement”, LFF-FV68), which is acknowledged. It is a pleasure to acknowledge the Institute Laue Langevin for the allocation of neutron beam time.

Primary authors

Mrs Stella Gries (TUHH Hamburg University of Technology, Institute for Materials and X-Ray Physics, DESY Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron) Mrs Sophia-Marie Schwake (University of Hamburg, Institute of Inorganic and Applied Chemistry) Mr Philip Lenz (University of Hamburg, Institute of Inorganic and Applied Chemistry) Dr Mark Busch (TUHH Hamburg University of Technology, Institute for Materials and X-Ray Physics, DESY Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron) Dr Markus Appel (Institut Laue-Langevin, Grenoble) Prof. Denis Morineau (University of Rennes, Institute of Physics) Prof. Michael Froeba (University of Hamburg, Institute of Inorganic and Applied Chemistry) Prof. Patrick Huber (TUHH Hamburg University of Technology, Institute for Materials and X-Ray Physics, DESY Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron)

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