| Literature DB >> 23443102 |
Ana-Maria Putz1, Mihai V Putz.
Abstract
The present work advances the inverse quantum (IQ) structural criterion for ordering and characterizing the porosity of the mesosystems based on the recently advanced ratio of the particle-to-wave nature of quantum objects within the extended Heisenberg uncertainty relationship through employing the quantum fluctuation, both for free and observed quantum scattering information, as computed upon spectral identification of the wave-numbers specific to the maximum of absorption intensity record, and to left-, right- and full-width at the half maximum (FWHM) of the concerned bands of a given compound. It furnishes the hierarchy for classifying the mesoporous systems from more particle-related (porous, tight or ionic bindings) to more wave behavior (free or covalent bindings). This so-called spectral inverse quantum (Spectral-IQ) particle-to-wave assignment was illustrated on spectral measurement of FT-IR (bonding) bands' assignment for samples synthesized within different basic environment and different thermal treatment on mesoporous materials obtained by sol-gel technique with n-dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (DTAB) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and of their combination as cosolvents. The results were analyzed in the light of the so-called residual inverse quantum information, accounting for the free binding potency of analyzed samples at drying temperature, and were checked by cross-validation with thermal decomposition techniques by endo-exo thermo correlations at a higher temperature.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23443102 PMCID: PMC3546670 DOI: 10.3390/ijms131215925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1General pattern for wave-number domains of FTIR absorption spectra for silica sol-gel based materials, emphasizing the specific transversal optical (TO) main modes of rocking (TO1), symmetric (TO2) and antisymmetric (TO3) vibrations of oxygen atoms in Si-O-Si bonds along the presently concerned disorder induced longitudinal-transverse vibrational mode (LO4-TO4) at the frontier of the silica network, along the remaining surface overtones and combinations of the network, residues and water vibrations, respectively. The marked LO4-TO4 band region is susceptible to wave-particle quantum “phase transition”, thus regulating the physicochemical properties of meso-porosity and bonding at the network surface.
The summary list of the vibration frequencies and their assignments on several bands corresponding to various structural units of the prototype silica network’s FTIR spectra of Figure 1.
| cm−1 | Assignments of the IR vibrations | References |
|---|---|---|
| 3470–3450 | Overlapping of the O-H stretching bands of hydrogen-bonded water molecules (H–O–H···H) with SiO–H stretchings of surface silanols hydrogen-bonded to molecular water (SiO–H···H2O) | [ |
| 3460–3000 | Molecular water hydrogens bonded to each other and to SiOH groups; the bands are mainly due to overtones or to combinations of vibrations of Si–OH or H2O | [ |
| 3360 | The water absorption bands | [ |
| 3260 | Silanol groups absorption bands | [ |
| 3000–2800 | Stretching of the C–H bond within various organic groups | [ |
| 3000–2800 | Symmetric and asymmetric fundamental stretching vibrations of CH2 and CH3 groups belonging to alkoxide and solvent residues | [ |
| 3000–1350 | Overtones and combinations of vibrations of organic residues, molecular water and SiO2 network | [ |
| 2960–2940 | Asymmetric stretching of C–CH3 and symmetric N–CH3 stretching vibration | [ |
| 2960 | Asymmetric C–H stretching of methyl [CH3] group of CTAB molecules, if present | [ |
| 2927 | Stretching of the C–H within surfactant (it disappears in the calcinated samples) | [ |
| 2925 | Absorption bands due to the CTAB surfactant | [ |
| 2922–2920 | Asymmetric stretching vibration of C–CH2 from the methylene chain | [ |
| 2890 | Vibration for (CH3) can be used to identify the presence of vibrational modes of unreacted TEOS and ethanol in the silica films | [ |
| 2872 | Symmetric stretching vibration of C–CH3 | [ |
| ~2850 | Absorption bands due to the CTAB surfactant; symmetric C–H stretching of methylene [CH2] chain in CTAB | [ |
| 2259 | A CN stretch | [ |
| 1870–960, 1640–960 | Combination of vibrations of the SiO2 network (1640 cm−1 band is often hidden by molecular water band) | [ |
| 1640 | Molecular water band | [ |
| 1630–1620 | Vibrations of molecular water (present only in the calcinated samples, if it is the case) | [ |
| 1478 | C–H bending of the surfactant (it disappears in the calcinated samples) | [ |
| ~1470 | A strong methylene/methyl band (indicative of a long-chain linear aliphatic structure and a high degree of regularity for the linear backbone structure) | [ |
| ~1350 | Absorption band due to the CTAB surfactant | [ |
| 1350–500 | Vibrations of C–H bonds | [ |
| 1300–400 | Combinations of vibrations of silica network | [ |
| 1260–1000 | Asymmetric stretching vibrations of Si–O–Si bridging sequences | [ |
| 1200–850 | Stretching vibration of structural groups containing SiO4 tetrahedral | [ |
| 1115–1000 | Band for formation of the siloxane bond | [ |
| 1070 | Asymmetric stretching vibrations of Si–O–Si in transverse optical mode (ASTO) | [ |
| 1050–900, 980–900 | Stretching vibration of free silanol groups on the surface of the amorphous solid | [ |
| 965 | Vibration for H3CO, can be used to identify the presence of vibrational modes of unreacted TEOS and ethanol in the silica films | [ |
| 960 | Si-OH stretching mode typical of gel structure (decreases in intensity till becoming insignificant when the material undergoes a polycondensation process during drying) | [ |
| 950 | Si–OH bending vibration modes | [ |
| 929 | When identified for CH2 can be used to identify the presence of vibrational modes of unreacted TEOS and ethanol in the silica films | [ |
| 820–800 | Symmetric stretching vibrations of Si–O–Si bonds belonging to ring structures | [ |
| 810 | Symmetric Si–O–Si motion | [ |
| 793 | Identified for Si–O and C–O, it can be used to recognize the presence of vibration modes of unreacted TEOS and ethanol in the silica films | [ |
| 789 | Indicates the organic groups as intact through being ascribed to their C–H stretching | [ |
| 725–720 | Methylene rocking vibration (indicative of a long-chain linear aliphatic structure and of a high degree of regularity for the linear backbone structure) | [ |
| 460–450 | Associated with Si–O–Si bond bending (rocking) vibration | [ |
Figure 2Depicted tendencies of the observed, free and inverse quantum (IQ) evolutions of the particle-to-wave ratio with respect to the quantum fluctuations (n) upon Equations 1–3, respectively; the additional curve of residual inverse quantum index RQ = 1 − IQ was added with the purpose of showing that free evolutions parallels RQ that is symmetrical with respect to the IQ factor.
Cases of the ionic liquid-based sol-gel synthesis used in this work. All chemicals were commercially available: Tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS), Metoxy-ethanol NH4OH (25%), NaOH, CTAB (Cetyltrimethylammonium bromide), and DTAB (n-dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide).
| Sample | Template | Base | Cosolvent | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | CTAB | NH3 | Metoxy-ethanol | TEOS |
| II | CTAB | NaOH | ||
| III | DTAB | NH3 | ||
| IV | DTAB | NaOH | ||
| V | CTAB+DTAB | NH3 | ||
| VI | CTAB+DTAB | NaOH |
Figure 3Absorption spectra of samples of Table 2 recorded at 60°C, with the TO4 band of Figure 1 enhanced by the respective labeling.
Figure 4The same spectra records as in Figure 3, here for 700 °C.
The Spectral-IQ results, as based on Equations (1)–(3) with quantum fluctuation factors (11) and (12) for the TO4 bands of Figure 3 (υ̃ = 1299.787[cm−1], υ̃ = 999.910[cm−1]) at 60 °C.
| υ̃0 ( | Δυ̃ | ( | ( | 1 – | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I-60 | 1057.76 | 79.4905 | 0.0751762 | 0.94921 | 0.0747549 | 0.952777 | 0.996257 | 0.00374301 |
| II-60 | 1063.55 | 107.4623 | 0.1011 | 0.947056 | 0.100083 | 0.95348 | 0.993266 | 0.00673417 |
| III-60 | 1061.62 | 91.0061 | 0.0857609 | 0.948407 | 0.085137 | 0.95304 | 0.995138 | 0.00486168 |
| IV-60 | 1063.55 | 112.1339 | 0.105501 | 0.946633 | 0.104346 | 0.953619 | 0.992674 | 0.00732553 |
| V-60 | 1062.59 | 80.1571 | 0.0754605 | 0.94919 | 0.0750345 | 0.952783 | 0.996229 | 0.00377119 |
| VI-60 | 1074.16 | 117.5866 | 0.109532 | 0.946227 | 0.108241 | 0.95375 | 0.992112 | 0.00788823 |
The same type of Spectral-IQ results as in Table 3, here for the TO4 bands of Figure 4 (υ̃ = 1299.787[cm−1], υ̃ = 999.910[cm−1]) at 700 °C.
| υ̃0 ( | Δυ̃ | ( | ( | 1 – | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I-700 | 1079.94 | 126.9705 | 0.117643 | 0.945365 | 0.116048 | 0.954029 | 0.990919 | 0.00908062 |
| II-700 | 1083.8 | 156.5567 | 0.144573 | 0.942084 | 0.141643 | 0.955078 | 0.986395 | 0.0136049 |
| III-700 | 1078.01 | 94.9767 | 0.0881346 | 0.948212 | 0.0874579 | 0.953104 | 0.994868 | 0.0051321 |
| IV-700 | 1085.73 | 87.0955 | 0.0802383 | 0.948839 | 0.0797267 | 0.952899 | 0.99574 | 0.0042602 |
| V-700 | 1083.8 | 70.1104 | 0.0647003 | 0.949903 | 0.0644312 | 0.952549 | 0.997223 | 0.00277721 |
| VI-700 | 1092.48 | 101.4627 | 0.0929001 | 0.947807 | 0.0921086 | 0.953237 | 0.994304 | 0.00569644 |
Figure 5Experimentally obtained thermo-gravimetric (TG), derivative thermo-gravimetric (DTG) and the second derivative thermo-gravimetric analysis (SDTA) curves for the samples of Table 2, along the parabola- and line-like regression curves TG[%] = f (T[0C]) when based on three and two thermodynamic points of Table 5, including endothermic and exothermic endpoints on the interpolated interval, respectively.
Identification of the thermo-gravimetric (TG) mass loss (in %) for specific turning points of derivative thermo-gravimetry (DTG) and the associated thermodynamic analysis (DTA), as resulted from the recorded plots of Figure 5 by reading the derivative (D) and second derivative (SD) thermo-gravimetric curves for the samples of Table 2.
| Sample | TG mass loss [%] | DTG [°C] | DTA |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | 1.80 | 60 | *endothermic |
| 32.78 | 260 | *endothermic | |
| 47.58 | 330 | * | |
| II | 0.24 | 40 | *endothermic |
| 4.66 | 110 | *endothermic | |
| 13.51 | 210 | endothermic | |
| 40.6 | 340 | ||
| 46.57 | 460 | * | |
| III | 0.41 | 30 | *endothermic |
| 38.34 | 310 | * | |
| IV | 0.567 | 40 | *endothermic |
| 8.49 | 160 | ||
| 19.69 | 230 | *endothermic | |
| 36.84 | 350 | ||
| 40.789 | 470 | * | |
| V | 1.1 | 50 | *endothermic |
| 39.72 | 330 | * | |
| VI | 1.022 | 50 | *endothermic |
| 22.947 | 350 | ||
| 29.09 | 610 | * |
“*”: marks used points for interpolations on Figure 5.
The indices of relative residual inverse quantum (IQ) spectral information and the thermo-gravimetrical one as computed upon Equation 13 with the data of Tables 3 and 4, and based on the regression equations of Figure 5, for the samples of Table 2 considered for thermal treatment at 700 °C relative to the drying synthesis case of 60 °C, respectively.
| Index | I | II | III | IV | V | VI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R1-IQ[%] | 142.602 | 102.028 | 5.56227 | 41.8445 | 26.3572 | 27.7856 |
| TG700[%] | 159.893 | 94.3906 | 91.1711 | 57.8074 | 90.7536 | 36.4482 |