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1.
Langmuir ; 38(1): 211-220, 2022 Jan 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34964631

ABSTRACT

Deformation of superhydrophobic cylindrical mesopores is studied during a cycle of forced water filling and spontaneous drying by in situ small-angle neutron scattering. A high-pressure setup is put forward to characterize the deformation of ordered mesoporous silanized silica up to 80 MPa. Strain isotherms of individual pores are deduced from the shift of the Bragg spectrum associated with the deformation of the hexagonal pore lattice. Due to their superhydrophobic nature, pore walls are not covered with a prewetting film. This peculiarity gives the ability to use a simple mechanical model to describe both filled and empty pore states without the pitfall of disjoining pressure effects. By fitting our experimental data with this model, we measure both the Young's modulus and the Poisson ratio of the nanometric silica wall. The measurement of this latter parameter constitutes a specificity offered by superhydrophobic nanopores with respect to hydrophilic ones.

2.
Chem Mater ; 32(9): 3944-3951, 2020 May 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32421084

ABSTRACT

Anisotropy is a key factor regarding mechanical or transport properties and thus the functionality of porous materials. However, the ability to deliberately design the pore structure of hierarchically organized porous networks toward anisotropic features is limited. Here, we report two straightforward routes toward hierarchically structured porous carbon monoliths with an anisotropic alignment of the microstructure on the level of macro- and mesopores. One approach is based on nanocasting (NC) of carbon precursors into hierarchical and anisotropic silica hard templates. The second route, a direct synthesis approach based on soft templating (ST), makes use of the flexibility of hierarchically structured resorcinol-formaldehyde gels, which are compressed and simultaneously carbonized in the deformed state. We present structural data of both types of carbon monoliths obtained by electron microscopy, nitrogen adsorption analysis, and SAXS measurements. In addition, we demonstrate how the degree of anisotropy can easily be controlled via the ST route.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(22): 12713-12723, 2020 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32462146

ABSTRACT

In situ small angle scattering is used to study the pore filling mechanism and the adsorption induced deformation of a silica sample with hierarchical porosity upon water adsorption. The high structural order of the cylindrical mesopores on a 2D hexagonal lattice allows obtaining adsorption induced strains from the shift of the corresponding Bragg peaks measured by in situ small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). However, apparent strains due to scattering contrast induced changes of the Bragg peak shapes emerge in SAXS. In contrast, small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) allows determining the real adsorption induced strains by employing a H2O/D2O adsorbate with net coherent scattering length density of zero. This allows separating the apparent strains from the real strains experimentally and comparing them with strains obtained from model calculations of the SAXS intensity. It is shown that the apparent strains cannot be described at all by a simple mesopore model of film growth and capillary condensation. A hierarchical model taking the scattering of the micropores and the outer surface of the mesoporous struts in the hierarchically porous sample properly into account, together with a modified mesopore filling mechanism based on a corona model, leads to satisfactory description of both, the adsorption isotherm and the measured apparent strains as derived by SAXS.

4.
Langmuir ; 35(35): 11590-11600, 2019 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31379170

ABSTRACT

Adsorption-induced deformation of a series of silica samples with hierarchical porosity has been studied by in situ small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and in situ dilatometry. Monolithic samples consisted of a disordered macroporous network of struts formed by a 2D lattice of hexagonally ordered cylindrical mesopores and disordered micropores within the mesopore walls. Strain isotherms were obtained at the mesopore level by analyzing the shift of the Bragg reflections from the ordered mesopore lattice in SANS data. Thus, SANS essentially measured the radial strain of the cylindrical mesopores including the volume changes of the mesopore walls due to micropore deformation. A H2O/D2O adsorbate with net zero coherent neutron scattering length density was employed in order to avoid apparent strain effects due to intensity changes during pore filling. In contrast to SANS, the strain isotherms obtained from in situ dilatometry result from a combination of axial and radial mesopore deformation together with micropore deformation. Strain data were quantitatively analyzed with a theoretical model for micro-/mesopore deformation by combining information from nitrogen and water adsorption isotherms to estimate the water-silica interaction. It was shown that in situ SANS provides complementary information to dilatometry and allows for a quantitative estimate of the elastic properties of the mesopore walls from water adsorption.

5.
Front Chem ; 6: 672, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30723714

ABSTRACT

To study the influence of the chemical and crystalline composition of core/shell NCs on their photoluminescence (PL) the mean structural profile of a large ensemble of NCs has to be retrieved in atomic resolution. This can be achieved by retrieving the chemical profile of core/shell NCs using anomalous small angle x-ray scattering (ASAXS) in combination with the analysis of powder diffraction data recorded by wide angle x-ray scattering (WAXS). In the current synchrotron based study, we investigate CdSe/CdS core/shell NCs with different core dimensions by recording simultaneously ASAXS and WAXS spectra. The CdS shells are grown epitaxial on nominal spherical CdSe cores with core diameters from around 3.5-5.5 nm. Three different CdSe shell thicknesses are realized by depositing around 4, 6, and 8 monolayers (MLs) of CdSe. We reveal that the epitaxial core/shell structure depicts a chemical sharp interface, even after a post growth annealing step. With increasing NC diameter, however, the CdSe/CdS NCs deviate significantly from a spherical shape. Instead an elliptical particle shape with pronounced surface facets for the larger core/shell NCs is found. In combination with the powder diffraction data we could relate this anisotropic shape to a mixture of crystal phases within the CdSe core. The smallest CdSe cores exhibit a pure hexagonal wurtzite crystal structure, whereas the larger ones also possess a cubic zincblende phase fraction. This mixed crystal phase fractions lead to a non-spherical shell growth with different thicknesses along specific crystallographic directions: The long axes are terminated by basal crystal faces parallel either to the a- or c-axis, the short axes by "tilted" pyramidal planes. By combining these structural data with the measured PL quantum yield values, we can clearly connect the optical output of the NCs to their shape and to their shell thickness. Above 6 ML CdS shell-thickness no further increase of the PL can be observed, but for large aspect ratio values the PL is significantly decreased. The gained understanding of the internal crystal structure on CdSe/CdS NCs is general applicable for a precise tuning of the optical properties of crystalline core/shell NCs.

6.
J Appl Crystallogr ; 50(Pt 5): 1404-1410, 2017 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29021735

ABSTRACT

A new in situ setup combining small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and dilatometry was used to measure water-adsorption-induced deformation of a monolithic silica sample with hierarchical porosity. The sample exhibits a disordered framework consisting of macropores and struts containing two-dimensional hexagonally ordered cylindrical mesopores. The use of an H2O/D2O water mixture with zero scattering length density as an adsorptive allows a quantitative determination of the pore lattice strain from the shift of the corresponding diffraction peak. This radial strut deformation is compared with the simultaneously measured macroscopic length change of the sample with dilatometry, and differences between the two quantities are discussed on the basis of the deformation mechanisms effective at the different length scales. It is demonstrated that the SANS data also provide a facile way to quantitatively determine the adsorption isotherm of the material by evaluating the incoherent scattering contribution of H2O at large scattering vectors.

7.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 11718, 2017 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28916804

ABSTRACT

Engineering the compositional gradient for core/shell semiconductor nanocrystals improves their optical properties. To date, however, the structure of graded core/shell nanocrystal emitters has only been qualitatively described. In this paper, we demonstrate an approach to quantify nanocrystal structure, selecting graded Ag-In-Se/ZnSe core/shell nanocrystals as a proof-of-concept material. A combination of multi-energy small-angle X-ray scattering and electron microscopy techniques enables us to establish the radial distribution of ZnSe with sub-nanometer resolution. Using ab initio shape-retrieval analysis of X-ray scattering spectra, we further determine the average shape of nanocrystals. These results allow us to generate three-dimensional, atomistic reconstructions of graded core/shell nanocrystals. We use these reconstructions to calculate solid-state Zn diffusion in the Ag-In-Se nanocrystals and the lattice mismatch between nanocrystal monolayers. Finally, we apply these findings to propose design rules for optimal shell structure and record-luminescent core/shell nanocrystals.

8.
ACS Nano ; 11(2): 1246-1256, 2017 02 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28135069

ABSTRACT

Epitaxial growth techniques enable nearly defect free heterostructures with coherent interfaces, which are of utmost importance for high performance electronic devices. While high-vacuum technology-based growth techniques are state-of-the art, here we pursue a purely solution processed approach to obtain nanocrystals with eptaxially coherent and quasi-lattice matched inorganic ligand shells. Octahedral metal-halide clusters, respectively 0-dimensional perovskites, were employed as ligands to match the coordination geometry of the PbS cubic rock-salt lattice. Different clusters (CH3NH3+)(6-x)[M(x+)Hal6](6-x)- (Mx+ = Pb(II), Bi(III), Mn(II), In(III), Hal = Cl, I) were attached to the nanocrystal surfaces via a scalable phase transfer procedure. The ligand attachment and coherence of the formed PbS/ligand core/shell interface was confirmed by combining the results from transmission electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and powder X-ray diffraction. The lattice mismatch between ligand shell and nanocrystal core plays a key role in performance. In photoconducting devices the best performance (detectivity of 2 × 1011 cm Hz 1/2/W with > 110 kHz bandwidth) was obtained with (CH3NH3)3BiI6 ligands, providing the smallest relative lattice mismatch of ca. -1%. PbS nanocrystals with such ligands exhibited in millimeter sized bulk samples in the form of pressed pellets a relatively high carrier mobility for nanocrystal solids of ∼1.3 cm2/(V s), a carrier lifetime of ∼70 µs, and a low residual carrier concentration of 2.6 × 1013 cm-3. Thus, by selection of ligands with appropriate geometry and bond lengths optimized quasi-epitaxial ligand shells were formed on nanocrystals, which are beneficial for applications in optoelectronics.

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