| Literature DB >> 22069236 |
Florian T U Kohler1, Bruno Morain, Alexander Weiss, Mathias Laurin, Jörg Libuda, Valentin Wagner, Berthold U Melcher, Xinjiao Wang, Karsten Meyer, Peter Wasserscheid.
Abstract
The influence of confinement on the ionic liquid crystal (ILC) [C(18)C(1)Im][OTf] is studied using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), polarized optical microscopy (POM), and diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS). The ILC studied is supported on Si-based powders and glasses with pore sizes ranging from 11 to 50 nm. The temperature of the solid-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition seems mostly unaffected by the confinement, whereas the temperature of the liquid-crystalline-to-liquid phase transition is depressed for smaller pore sizes. A contact layer with a thickness in the order of 2 nm is identified. The contact layer exhibits a phase transition at a temperature 30 K lower than the solid-to-liquid-crystalline phase transition observed for the neat ILC. For applications within the "supported ionic liquid phase (SILP)" concept, the experiments show that in pores of diameter 50 nm a pore filling of α>0.4 is sufficient to reproduce the phase transitions of the neat ILC.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22069236 DOI: 10.1002/cphc.201100379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemphyschem ISSN: 1439-4235 Impact factor: 3.102