Description
This work systematically investigates structure-stability relations in various polymer derived ceramic (PDC) systems and metal organic frameworks (MOFs), both of which are hybrid materials. The investigation of silicon carbides (SiC) confirms thermodynamic stabilization of PDCs with increasing mixed bonding (Si bonded to both C, O and/or N). The study of more complex silicon oxycarbide (SiOC) structures shows stabilization of SiOCs with increasing pyrolysis temperature (between 1200 and1500 oC), and points to dissimilarities in the stabilizing effect of different mixed bonding environments (SiO3C, SiO2C2, or SiOC3) and their relative amounts. Analyses of quaternary silicon oxycarbonitride (SiC(N)(O)) materials suggests increased stabilization with increasing N content, and superior stabilization due to SiNxC4-x compared to SiOxC4-x mixed bonds. Investigation of the energetics of metal filler (Nb, Hf, Ta) incorporation in SiOCs shows that choice of metal filler influences the composition, structural evolution, and thermodynamic stability in PDCs. Ta fillers can stabilize otherwise unstable SiO3C mixed bonds. Independent of metal incorporation or lack thereof, in SiOC systems, higher pyrolysis temperature (1200-1500 oC) forms more stable ceramics. The stabilizing effect of order/disorder of the free carbon phase is system-dependent. The work on (MOFs) highlights stabilization trends obtained from the investigation of zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) and boron imidazolate frameworks (BIFs) based on azolate linkers. Study of the energetics of metal (Co(II), Cu (II), and Zn (II) ) substitution in isostructural ZIFs shows that in MOFs the stabilizing effect of metal is dependent on both framework topology (diamondoid (dia) > sodalite (SOD)) and dimensionality (2D > 3D). Thermodynamic analyses of metal substitution (Ag(I), Cu(I), and Li (I)) in isostructural ii SOD and dia BIF systems confirm increase in density as a general descriptor for increased stabilization in MOFs. The study of energetics of guest-host interactions during CO2 incorporation in azolate frameworks (i.e., ZIF-8) shows strong dependence of energetics of adsorption on choice of linker and metal. Additionally, several energetically favorable reaction pathways for the formation of CO3-ZIF-8 have been identified. Both PDCs and MOFs show a complex energetic landscape, with identifiable system dependent and general structural descriptors for increased thermodynamic stabilization and tunability of the energetics of guest-host interactions.
Details
Title
- Structure, Thermodynamic Stability, and Energetics of Guest-host Interactions in Hybrid Materials: Polymer Derived Ceramics (PDCs) and Metal Organic Frameworks (MOFs)
Contributors
- Leonel, Gerson J (Author)
- Navrotsky, Alexandra (Thesis advisor)
- Dai, Lenore (Committee member)
- Thomas, Mary (Committee member)
- Singh, Gurpreet (Committee member)
- Friščić, Tomislav (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2023
Subjects
Resource Type
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Note
- Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2023
- Field of study: Chemical Engineering