Polyimides are at the forefront of advanced membrane materials for CO capture and gas-purification processes. Recently, ionic polyimides (i-PIs) have been reported as a new class of condensation polymers that combine structural components of both ionic liquids (ILs) and polyimides through covalent linkages. In this study, we report CO and CH adsorption and structural analyses of an i-PI and an i-PI + IL composite containing [Cmim][TfN]. The combination of molecular dynamics (MD) and grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) simulations is used to compute the gas solubility and the adsorption performance with respect to the density, fractional free volume (FFV), and surface area of the materials. Our results highlight the polymer relaxation process and its correlation to the gas solubility. In particular, the surface area can provide meaningful guidance with respect to the gas solubility, and it tends to be a more sensitive indicator of the adsorption behavior versus only considering the system density and FFV. For instance, as the polymer continues to relax, the density, FFV, and pore-size distribution remain constant while the surface area can continue to increase, enabling more adsorption. Structural analyses are also conducted to identify the nature of the gas adsorption once the ionic liquid is added to the polymer. The presence of the IL significantly displaces the CO molecules from the ligand nitrogen sites in the neat i-PI to the imidazolium rings in the i-PI + IL composite. However, the CH molecules move from the imidazolium ring sites in the neat i-PI to the ligand nitrogen atoms in the i-PI + IL composite. These molecular details can provide critical information for the experimental design of highly selective i-PI materials as well as provide additional guidance for the interpretation of the simulated adsorption systems.
Ionic
polyimides (i-PI) are a new class of polymer materials that
are very promising for CO2 capture membranes, and recent
experimental studies have demonstrated their enhanced separation performance
with the addition of imidazolium-based ionic liquids (ILs). However,
there is very little known about the molecular-level interactions
in these systems, which give rise to interesting gas adsorption and
diffusion characteristics. In this study, we use a combination of
Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics simulations to analyze the equilibrium
and transport properties of CO2 molecules in the i-PI and
i-PI + IL composite materials. The addition of several different common
ILs are modeled, which have a plasticization effect on the i-PI, lowering
the glass transition temperature (T
g).
The solubility of CO2 strongly correlates with the T
g, but the diffusion demonstrates more unpredictable
behavior. At low concentrations, the IL has a blocking effect, leading
to reduced diffusion rates. However, as the IL surpasses a threshold
value, the relationship is inverted and the IL has a facilitating
effect on the gas transport. This behavior is attributed to the simultaneous
contributions of the increased i-PI plasticization at higher IL concentrations
(facilitating gas hopping rates from cavity-to-cavity) and the increased
IL continuity throughout the system, enabling more favorable transport
pathways for CO2 diffusion.
Bismuth telluride (BiTe) is a well-known thermoelectric material with potential applications in several different emerging technologies. The bulk structure is composed of stacks of quintuple sheets (with weak interactions between neighboring sheets), and the performance of the material can be significantly enhanced if exfoliated into two-dimensional nanosheets. In this study, eight different imidazolium-based ionic liquids are evaluated as solvents for the exfoliation and dispersion of BiTe at temperatures ranging from 350 to 550 K. Three distinct exfoliation mechanisms are evaluated (pulling, shearing, and peeling) using steered molecular dynamics simulations, and we predict that the peeling mechanism is thermodynamically the most favorable route. Furthermore, the [TfN]-based ionic liquids are particularly effective at enhancing the exfoliation, and this performance can be correlated to the unique molecular-level solvation structures developed at the BiTe surfaces. This information helps provide insight into the molecular origins of exfoliation and solvation involving BiTe (and possibly other layered chalcogenide materials) and ionic liquid solvents.
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