Periodic Reporting for period 1 - DYONCON (Dynamic Ions under Nano-Confinement for Porous Membranes with Ultrafast Gas Permeation Control)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2022-07-01 do 2024-12-31
Here, the dynamic properties of nanoconfined ions will be explored by using well-defined, tunable model systems. This is realized by combining two exclusive material classes: ionic liquids, ILs, which are room-temperature molten salts of organic molecules, and films of metal-organic frameworks, MOFs. MOF films provide the variable, crystalline, scaffold-like container for the ion confinement. An applied electric field will act on the nanoconfined ILs, causing its directed movements. Controlling the dynamic properties of the nanoconfined ions will lead to myriad advances of safety and efficiency concerns, including enhanced charging rates of energy storage devices.
In a new approach, we will also show that nanoconfined ions provide unprecedented functionalities. Based on the functional uniformity of IL@MOF membranes, the nano-level control of the confined ions will be used to regulate macroscopic gas fluxes with ultrafast switching rates.
This project aims to enhance the potentials of electrochemical technologies in energy storage, in sensors and in iontronics. The benefits will not only impact the improvement of speed, quality and control in existing technologies, but it will change the way we look at mobile confined ions and launch us into new methods of using nanomaterials.
The impact of the pore size, pore structure and the chemical functionalization is explored, as well as the impact of the different ILs, where the ion size of the cations and ions are tuned. (Pillar 2) First we focused on ILs with anions of different sizes in one prototype MOF host structure.
In the second goal of the project, we aim to show that nanoconfined ions provide unprecedented functionalities. The nano-level control of the confined ions will be used to regulate macroscopic gas fluxes with fast switching rates. First, we focus on the switching of the membrane permeation and selectivity of different gas molecules (Pillar 3).