4.6 Article

Differential hysteresis scanning of non-templated monomodal amorphous aerogels

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 5422-5430

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0cp05520d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [CMMI-1634448]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) through Non-Academic Research Internship for Graduate Students (IN-TERN)

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The study utilized Differential Hysteresis Scanning (DHS) Porosimetry to quantify hierarchical connectivity in amorphous silicon oxycarbide aerogels, revealing a system with monomodal distribution that exhibits uniformity usually only observed in crystalline systems.
We perform Differential Hysteresis Scanning (DHS) Porosimetry of amorphous silicon oxycarbide aerogels to quantify hierarchical connectivity in these porous materials. We contrast high-resolution argon sorption scanning isotherms of samples obtained through a non-templated synthesis using different solvents, and characterize respective changes after calcination at 1000 degrees C. The multi-scan DHS data sets are analyzed through non-negative least-squares deconvolution using a kernel of theoretically derived isotherms for a selection of hierarchical geometries using non-local density functional theory (NL-DFT). We obtain two-dimensional contour plots that characterize mesopores according to the ratio between pore diameter and its connecting window. Combined information from DHS and complementary BET and BJH approaches reveals one system with monomodal distribution both in pore diameters and in window diameters. Hence, this amorphous material exhibits a uniformity usually only observed for crystalline systems. We demonstrate that DHS analysis provides quantitative data analyzing the hierarchical structure of mesoporous materials and unlocks pathways towards tailored materials with control of surface heterogeneity, localization, and sequential accessibility - even for amorphous systems.

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