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Artificial Synthesis and Characterisation of Amorphous Microporous Framework Materials

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Artificial Synthesis and Characterisation of Amorphous Microporous Framework Materials. / Mollart, Catherine.
Lancaster University, 2024. 287 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Mollart C. Artificial Synthesis and Characterisation of Amorphous Microporous Framework Materials. Lancaster University, 2024. 287 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2468

Author

Mollart, Catherine. / Artificial Synthesis and Characterisation of Amorphous Microporous Framework Materials. Lancaster University, 2024. 287 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{94737402ddd24d90b6921e3f83a3d23b,
title = "Artificial Synthesis and Characterisation of Amorphous Microporous Framework Materials",
abstract = "In this thesis, four microporous polymer materials are simulated using anartificial synthesis protocol. The resulting models are then compared to experiment to rationalise the structure and properties. The first material discussed is CMP-1, used to rationalise the influence of reaction solvent choice on the porosity of conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs). It was established that the polarity of the solvent relative to the monomer building blocks is crucial to the formation of the polymer framework and resulting pore structure.The second material is a hypercrosslinked polymer (HCP), which, when loadedwith azobenzene, shows differing porosities and gas uptakes depending on thepresence and isomer of azobenzene. These differences were rationalised dueto changes in the micropore region of the pore size distribution, and the abilityof cis-azobenzene to interact with carbon dioxide via dipole-quadrupole interactions, rather than the ability of the carbon dioxide to diffuse throughout the material.The third material is organically synthesised porous carbon (OSPC)-1, composed of sp3 hybridised carbon nodes connected by sp hybridised carbonlinkers. The solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of thisframework appears to show an alternative structure, and it was rationalisedthat the framework is composed of dense, interpenetrated, and non-porouspolymer chains, surrounded by a thin shell of open, porous OSPC-1, explaining the experimental porosity and NMR.Finally, CTF-1, a covalent triazine framework, is simulated to rationalise thedifferences in the Fourier-transform infrared spectra of CTF-1 synthesisedusing high-temperature ionothermal conditions, and the same material synthesised at room temperature, named P1. It was established that the amorphous P1 structure is able to incorporate additional structural diversity within the system, composed of neutral intermediates and alternative ring features formed during the kinetically controlled reaction. The remaining peaks in the spectrum were rationalised as absorbed guest molecules that interactfavourably with the framework.",
author = "Catherine Mollart",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2468",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Artificial Synthesis and Characterisation of Amorphous Microporous Framework Materials

AU - Mollart, Catherine

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - In this thesis, four microporous polymer materials are simulated using anartificial synthesis protocol. The resulting models are then compared to experiment to rationalise the structure and properties. The first material discussed is CMP-1, used to rationalise the influence of reaction solvent choice on the porosity of conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs). It was established that the polarity of the solvent relative to the monomer building blocks is crucial to the formation of the polymer framework and resulting pore structure.The second material is a hypercrosslinked polymer (HCP), which, when loadedwith azobenzene, shows differing porosities and gas uptakes depending on thepresence and isomer of azobenzene. These differences were rationalised dueto changes in the micropore region of the pore size distribution, and the abilityof cis-azobenzene to interact with carbon dioxide via dipole-quadrupole interactions, rather than the ability of the carbon dioxide to diffuse throughout the material.The third material is organically synthesised porous carbon (OSPC)-1, composed of sp3 hybridised carbon nodes connected by sp hybridised carbonlinkers. The solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of thisframework appears to show an alternative structure, and it was rationalisedthat the framework is composed of dense, interpenetrated, and non-porouspolymer chains, surrounded by a thin shell of open, porous OSPC-1, explaining the experimental porosity and NMR.Finally, CTF-1, a covalent triazine framework, is simulated to rationalise thedifferences in the Fourier-transform infrared spectra of CTF-1 synthesisedusing high-temperature ionothermal conditions, and the same material synthesised at room temperature, named P1. It was established that the amorphous P1 structure is able to incorporate additional structural diversity within the system, composed of neutral intermediates and alternative ring features formed during the kinetically controlled reaction. The remaining peaks in the spectrum were rationalised as absorbed guest molecules that interactfavourably with the framework.

AB - In this thesis, four microporous polymer materials are simulated using anartificial synthesis protocol. The resulting models are then compared to experiment to rationalise the structure and properties. The first material discussed is CMP-1, used to rationalise the influence of reaction solvent choice on the porosity of conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs). It was established that the polarity of the solvent relative to the monomer building blocks is crucial to the formation of the polymer framework and resulting pore structure.The second material is a hypercrosslinked polymer (HCP), which, when loadedwith azobenzene, shows differing porosities and gas uptakes depending on thepresence and isomer of azobenzene. These differences were rationalised dueto changes in the micropore region of the pore size distribution, and the abilityof cis-azobenzene to interact with carbon dioxide via dipole-quadrupole interactions, rather than the ability of the carbon dioxide to diffuse throughout the material.The third material is organically synthesised porous carbon (OSPC)-1, composed of sp3 hybridised carbon nodes connected by sp hybridised carbonlinkers. The solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of thisframework appears to show an alternative structure, and it was rationalisedthat the framework is composed of dense, interpenetrated, and non-porouspolymer chains, surrounded by a thin shell of open, porous OSPC-1, explaining the experimental porosity and NMR.Finally, CTF-1, a covalent triazine framework, is simulated to rationalise thedifferences in the Fourier-transform infrared spectra of CTF-1 synthesisedusing high-temperature ionothermal conditions, and the same material synthesised at room temperature, named P1. It was established that the amorphous P1 structure is able to incorporate additional structural diversity within the system, composed of neutral intermediates and alternative ring features formed during the kinetically controlled reaction. The remaining peaks in the spectrum were rationalised as absorbed guest molecules that interactfavourably with the framework.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2468

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2468

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -