11월 17, 2024

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Molecular Magic – 연구원들이 강철보다 강한 경량의 2차원 물질을 개발했습니다.

Molecular Magic – 연구원들이 강철보다 강한 경량의 2차원 물질을 개발했습니다.

연구원들은 여러 층으로 쌓였을 때 공유 유기 프레임워크(COF)라고 하는 2차원 폴리머의 기계적 특성을 유지하는 방법을 개발했습니다. 연구팀은 분자 구조를 변형해 강철보다 몇 배 더 강하면서도 겹겹이 쌓인 형태에서도 2차원적 특성을 유지하는 경량 소재를 만들었다. 잠재적인 응용 분야에는 필터 멤브레인과 업그레이드된 배터리가 포함됩니다. 이 연구는 또한 세라믹과 금속의 설계에 영향을 미쳐 더 낮은 온도에서 제조 및 변형이 가능하도록 만들 수 있습니다.

라이스 대학과 메릴랜드 대학의 과학자들은 주요 장애물을 극복하기 위한 노력을 주도하고 있습니다.

지구상에서 가장 강력한 물질 중 하나로 인정받고 있지만, 그 잠재력을 최대한 활용하는 것은 어려운 작업임이 입증되었습니다.

가장 얇은 양파껍질 종이보다 미세한 2D 소재는 뛰어난 기계적 물성으로 많은 주목을 받아왔습니다. 그러나 이러한 특성은 재료가 적층되면 사라지므로 실제 적용이 제한됩니다.

메릴랜드 대학교(UMD) 기계 공학과의 Keystone 교수인 Teng Li는 “흑연 연필을 생각해 보십시오.”라고 말합니다. 그 핵심은 흑연으로 만들어졌으며 흑연은 여러 층의[{” attribute=””>graphene, which has been found to be the world’s toughest material. Yet a graphite pencil isn’t strong at all—in fact, graphite is even used as a lubricant.”

Now, Li and collaborators at Rice University and the University of Houston have found a way to overcome this barrier, by carefully tweaking the molecular structure of 2D polymers known as covalent organic frameworks (COFs). The findings are detailed in a new study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“It’s a very exciting starting point,” said Rice University materials science and nanoengineering professor Jun Lou, who led the Rice team.

Covalent Organic Framework

A sample of the covalent organic framework material that researchers found preserves its 2D mechanical properties as a multilayer stack. Credit: Gustavo Raskosky/Rice University

Using molecular-level simulations, the researchers studied different functional groups—that is, arrangements of molecular elements—and then designed two COFs with minute differences in structure. They then studied how the COFs behaved when stacked into layers. It turned out that the tiny structural differences led to significantly different results.

The first COF, like most 2D materials, showed only a weak interaction among layers, and both strength and elasticity drained away as more layers were added. Not so with the second COF, which “exhibits strong interlayer interaction and retains its good mechanical properties even as multiple layers are added,” said Rice University doctoral student Qiyi Fang, a co-lead author of the PNAS paper.

According to the researchers, this phenomenon is most likely due to hydrogen bonding. “We found from our simulations that the strong interlayer interactions in the second type of COF result from the significantly enhanced hydrogen bonding among its special functional groups,” said co-lead author Zhengqian Pang, a UMD post-doctoral researcher and a member of Li’s research group.

Applying their findings, the research team then produced a lightweight material that not only is several times stronger than steel, but preserves its 2D properties even when stacked into multiple layers.

The potential applications are many. “COFs could make excellent filtration membranes,” said Rice’s Lou. “For a filtration system, the functional group structure at the pore will be very important. As you have, say, dirty water traveling through a COF membrane, the functional group at the pore will capture the impurities only and allow the desired molecule to pass. In this process, the mechanical integrity of that membrane will be very important. Now we have a way to design very strong, very fracture-resistant, multilayer 2D polymers that could be very good candidates for membrane filtration applications.”

“Another potential application is for upgrading batteries: Replacing the graphite anode with a silicon one would greatly increase the storage capacity of current lithium-ion battery technologies,” he said.

Insights from the research could also lead to advances in designing a broad range of materials, including ceramics and metals, said Li. Ceramics, for instance, depend on ionic bonding that forms at very high temperatures, which is why a broken coffee mug can’t be easily fixed. Metals, likewise, require forging at high temperatures. With the molecular tweaking being explored by the researchers, similar products could conceivably be manufactured and repaired without turning up the heat.

“Although the immediate context is 2D materials, more generally we’re pioneering ways to exploit the advantageous properties of materials without the constraints these materials present,” Li said.

Reference: “Superior mechanical properties of multilayer covalent-organic frameworks enabled by rationally tuning molecular interlayer interactions” by Qiyi Fang, Zhengqian Pang, Qing Ai, Yifeng Liu, Tianshu Zhai, Doug Steinbach, Guanhui Gao, Yifan Zhu, Teng Li and Jun Lou, 4 April 2023, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2208676120

The study was supported by the Army Research Laboratory Cooperative Agreement, the Welch Foundation and the Maryland Advanced Research Computing Center.