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  4. Self-assembly of ionic superdiscs in nanopores
 
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Self-assembly of ionic superdiscs in nanopores

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.13130
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2024-06-04
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Li, Zhuoqing 
Material- und Röntgenphysik M-2  
Raab, Aileen Rebecca  
Kolmangadi, Mohamed A.  
Busch, Mark  orcid-logo
Material- und Röntgenphysik M-2  
Grunwald, Marco André  
Demel, Felix  
Bertram, Florian  
Kityk, Andriy V.  
Schönhals, Andreas  
Laschat, Sabine  
Huber, Patrick  orcid-logo
Material- und Röntgenphysik M-2  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.13130
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/48265
Journal
ACS nano  
Volume
18
Issue
22
Start Page
14414
End Page
14426
Citation
ACS Nano 18 (22): 14414-14426 (2024)
Publisher DOI
10.1021/acsnano.4c01062
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85193736894
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Discotic ionic liquid crystals (DILCs) consist of self-assembled superdiscs of cations and anions that spontaneously stack in linear columns with high one-dimensional ionic and electronic charge mobility, making them prominent model systems for functional soft matter. Compared to classical nonionic discotic liquid crystals, many liquid crystalline structures with a combination of electronic and ionic conductivity have been reported, which are of interest for separation membranes, artificial ion/proton conducting membranes, and optoelectronics. Unfortunately, a homogeneous alignment of the DILCs on the macroscale is often not achievable, which significantly limits the applicability of DILCs. Infiltration into nanoporous solid scaffolds can, in principle, overcome this drawback. However, due to the experimental challenges to scrutinize liquid crystalline order in extreme spatial confinement, little is known about the structures of DILCs in nanopores. Here, we present temperature-dependent high-resolution optical birefringence measurement and 3D reciprocal space mapping based on synchrotron X-ray scattering to investigate the thermotropic phase behavior of dopamine-based ionic liquid crystals confined in cylindrical channels of 180 nm diameter in macroscopic anodic aluminum oxide membranes. As a function of the membranes’ hydrophilicity and thus the molecular anchoring to the pore walls (edge-on or face-on) and the variation of the hydrophilic-hydrophobic balance between the aromatic cores and the alkyl side chain motifs of the superdiscs by tailored chemical synthesis, we find a particularly rich phase behavior, which is not present in the bulk state. It is governed by a complex interplay of liquid crystalline elastic energies (bending and splay deformations), polar interactions, and pure geometric confinement and includes textural transitions between radial and axial alignment of the columns with respect to the long nanochannel axis. Furthermore, confinement-induced continuous order formation is observed in contrast to discontinuous first-order phase transitions, which can be quantitatively described by Landau-de Gennes free energy models for liquid crystalline order transitions in confinement. Our observations suggest that the infiltration of DILCs into nanoporous solids allows tailoring their nanoscale texture and ion channel formation and thus their electrical and optical functionalities over an even wider range than in the bulk state in a homogeneous manner on the centimeter scale as controlled by the monolithic nanoporous scaffolds.
Subjects
ionic liquid crystal
Landau de-Gennes analysis
nanoporous material
optical birefringence
X-ray scattering
DDC Class
530: Physics
540: Chemistry
620.1: Engineering Mechanics and Materials Science
660: Chemistry; Chemical Engineering
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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