18th Biennial Intl. Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter held in conjunction with the 24th Biennial Intl. Conference of the Intl. Association for the Advancement of High Pressure Science and Technology (AIRAPT)
Volume 58, Number 7
Sunday–Friday, July 7–12, 2013;
Seattle, Washington
Session H7: CH.1 Chemistry: High Pressure Synthesis
9:15 AM–10:45 AM,
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
Room: Grand Crescent
Chair: Bill Proud, Imperial College London
Abstract ID: BAPS.2013.SHOCK.H7.1
Abstract: H7.00001 : High pressure synthesis of novel, zeolite based nano-composite materials
9:15 AM–9:45 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Mario Santoro
(Istituto di Fisica Applicata N. Carrara, IFAC-CNR)
Meso/micro-porous solids such as zeolites are complex materials exhibiting
an impressive range of applications, including molecular sieve, gas storage,
catalysis, electronics and photonics. We used these materials, particularly
non catalytic zeolites in an entirely different fashion. In fact, we
performed high pressure (0.5-30 GPa) chemical reactions of simple molecules
on a sub-nanometer scale in the channels of a pure SiO$_{\mathrm{2}}$
zeolite, silicalite to obtain unique nano-composite materials with
drastically modified physical and chemical properties. Our material
investigations are based on a combination of X-ray diffraction and optical
spectroscopy techniques in the diamond anvil cell. I will first briefly show
how silicalite can be easily filled by simple molecules such as Ar,
CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$ and C$_{\mathrm{2}}$H$_{\mathrm{4}}$ among others from the
fluid phase at high pressures, and how this efficient filling removes the
well known pressure induced amorphization of the silica framework (Haines et
al., JACS 2010). I will then present on a silicon carbonate crystalline
phase synthesized by reacting silicalite and molecular CO$_{\mathrm{2}}$
that fills the nano-pores, at 18-26 GPa and 600-980 K; after the synthesis
the compound is temperature quenched and it results to be slightly
metastable at room conditions (Santoro et al., PNAS 2011). On the other
hand, a stable at room condition spectacular crystalline nano-composite is
obtained by photo-polymerizing ethylene at 0.5-1.5 GPa under UV (351-364 nm)
irradiation in the channels of silicalite (Santoro et al., Nat. Commun,, in
press 2013). For this composite we obtained a structure with single
polyethylene chains adapting very well to the confining channels, which
results in significant increases in bulk modulus and density, and the
thermal expansion coefficient changes sign from negative to positive with
respect to the original silicalite host. Mechanical properties may thus be
tuned by varying the amount of polymerized ethylene. We then think our
findings could allow the high pressure, catalyst free synthesis of a unique
generation of technological, functional materials based on simple
hydrocarbons polymerized in confining meso/micro-porous solids.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2013.SHOCK.H7.1