110 resultados para organic ionic plastic crystals


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The modification of carbon fibre surfaces has been achieved using a novel combination of low power microwave irradiation (20 W) in both an ionic liquid (1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide) and an organic solvent (1,2-dichlorobenzene). The use of the ionic liquid was superior to the organic solvent in this application, resulting in a higher density of surface grafted material. As a consequence, carbon fibres treated in the ionic liquid displayed improved interfacial adhesion in the composite material (+28% relative to untreated fibres) compared to those treated in organic solvent (+18%). The methodology presented herein can be easily scaled up to industrially relevant quantities and represent a drastic reduction in both reaction time (30 min from 24 h) and energy consumption, compared to previously reported procedures. This work opens the door to potential energy and time saving strategies which can be applied to carbon fibre manufacture for high performance carbon fibre reinforced composites.

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In order to study the strain rate effect on single crystal of aluminum (99.999% purity), aluminum single crystals are fabricated and subjected to uniaxial compression loading at quasi-static and dynamic strain rates, i.e., from 10-4 s-1 to 1000 s-1. The orientation dependence is also investigated with single slip or multi slip. The stress-strain curves of pure Al single crystals along two orientations and at different strain rates are obtained after measuring initial orientation using the Laue Back-Reflection technique. Crystal Plasticity Finite Element Method (CPFEM) with three different single crystal plasticity constitutive models is used to simulate the deformations along two orientations under various strain-rates. The classical and two newly developed single crystal plasticity models are used in the investigation. The simulation results of these models are compared to experimental results in order to study their abilities to predict finite plastic deformation of single crystalline metal over a wide strain rate range.

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The recent discovery of liquid crystalline (LC) behavior of graphene oxide (GO) dispersions in various organic, and aqueous media brings added control to the assembly of larger structures using the chemical process approach.[1-3] The LC state can be used to direct the ordered assembly of nanocomponents in macroscopic structures via simple methods like wet-spinning. [3] Here, we developed a scaleable fabrication route to produce graphene fibers via a facile continuoes wetspinning methode. We develop solid understanding in the required criteria to correlate processability with LC behavior, aspect ratio and the dispersion concentration to provide a viable platform for spinning of LC GO. We demonstrate a striking result that highlits the importance of GO sheet size and polydispersity in generating wetspinnable LC GO dispersions from very low spinning dope concentrations (as low as 0.075 wt. %). The new knowledge gained through rheological investigations provides a sound explanation as to why continuous spinning of binder-free GO fibers is enabled by the LC behavior at this very low concentration.

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The effect of adding glycerol carbonate (GC) or propylene carbonate (PC) to sodium (Na)-bentonite on the hydraulic performance of geosynthetic clay liners (GCLs) under hypersaline conditions is examined. Fluid loss (FL), swell index (SI) and solution retention capacity (SRC) measurements were carried out to compare the potential hydraulic performance of these two cyclic organic carbonates (COCs) as bentonite modifiers. A modified FL test enabled quantitative measurement of both the water retention characteristics of untreated and COC modified bentonites as well as calculation of hydraulic conductivity values. Tests under aggressively saline conditions (ionic strength, I ≥ 1 M of NaCl and ≥3 M of CaCl2) showed that at a mass ratio of 1:1 (GC to bentonite), the FL of a GC-Na-bentonite was ≈40–104 mL in NaCl and ≈61–91 mL in CaCl2. This was about 10–20 mL and 70–200 mL, respectively, lower than that of a comparable PC-Na-bentonite (1:1 PC to bentonite) and untreated Na-bentonite. Greater swelling (SI) and greater solution retention capacity (SRC) was observed for the GC treated Na-bentonite compared to untreated Na-bentonite in all salt solutions, and for PC-Na-bentonite at high ionic strength of both NaCl and CaCl2 solutions, demonstrating the superior hydraulic barrier performance of COC-bentonites under severely saline conditions. Experiments conducted in flexible-wall permeameters with I = 3 M CaCl2 showed approximately one order of magnitude lower (∼10−11 m/s vs ∼1.9 × 10−10 m/s) hydraulic conductivity of GC treated bentonite cake compared to the k value of the untreated Na-bentonite cake. Calculated hydraulic conductivity from fluid loss tests estimated the measured values in a conservative way (overestimation).

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In order for sodium batteries to become a safe, lower cost option for large scale energy storage, minimising the price of all components is important. We report here on the application of a pyrrolidinium room temperature ionic liquid comprising the dicyanamide anion as a successful electrolyte system for sodium metal batteries that does not contain expensive fluorinated species. The effects of plating/stripping of sodium from Na metal electrodes has been investigated in a symmetrical Na | electrolyte | Na configuration at a current density of 10 μA cm− 2. Comparisons are drawn to reference organic electrolytes comprising propylene carbonate-fluoroethylene carbonate. Residual water molecules in the ionic liquid electrolyte are observed to have a significant effect upon the surface film and subsequent favourable plating/stripping behaviour of symmetrical cells and this is explored in detail. An increase of the moisture content from 90 ppm to 400 ppm impedes both electrodeposition and electrodissolution of the Na+/Na. This is investigated at Ni electrodes using cyclic voltammetry at different Na+-salt concentrations to further understand the mechanism.