Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials

Porous materials have long been a research interest due to their practical importance in traditional chemical industries such as catalysis and separation processes. The successful synthesis of porous materials requires further understanding of the fundamental physics that govern the formation of the...

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Main Author: Jin, Lin
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2012
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Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/647
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1648&context=open_access_dissertations
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-open_access_dissertations-16482020-12-02T14:39:49Z Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials Jin, Lin Porous materials have long been a research interest due to their practical importance in traditional chemical industries such as catalysis and separation processes. The successful synthesis of porous materials requires further understanding of the fundamental physics that govern the formation of these materials. In this thesis, we apply molecular modeling methods and develop novel models to study the formation mechanism of ordered porous materials. The improved understanding provides an opportunity to rational control pore size, pore shape, surface reactivity and may lead to new design of tailor-made materials. To attain detailed structural evolution of silicate materials, an atomistic model with explicitly representation of silicon and oxygen atoms is developed. Our model is based on rigid tetrahedra (representing SiO4) occupying the sites of a body centered cubic (bcc) lattice. The model serves as the base model to study the formation of silica materials. We first carried out Monte Carlo simulations to describe the polymerization process of silica without template molecules starting from a solution of silicic acid in water at pH 2. We predicted Qn evolutions during silica polymerization and good agreement was found compared with experimental data, where Qn is the fraction of Si atoms with n bridging oxygens. The model captures the basic kinetics of silica polymerization and provides structural evolution information. Next we generalize the application of this atomic lattice model to materials with tetrahedral (T) and bridging (B) atoms and apply parallel tempering Monte Carlo methods to search for ground states. We show that the atomic lattice model can be applied to silica and related materials with a rich variety of structures including known chalcogenides, zeolite analogs, and layered materials. We find that whereas canonical Monte Carlo simulations of the model consistently produce the amorphous solids studied in our previous work, parallel tempering Monte Carlo gives rise to ordered nanoporous solids. The utility of parallel tempering highlights the existence of barriers between amorphous and crystalline phases of our model. The role of template molecules during synthesis of ordered mesoporous materials was investigated. Implemented surfactant lattice model of Larson, together with atomic tetrahedral model for silica, we successfully modeled the formation of surfactant-templated mesoporous silica (MCM-41), with explicit representation of silicic acid condensation and surfactant self-assembly. Lamellar and hexagonal mesophases form spontaneously at different synthesis conditions, consistent with published experimental observations. Under conditions where silica polymerization is negligible, reversible transformation between hexagonal and lamellar phases were observed by changing synthesis temperatures. Upon long-time simulation that allows condensation of silanol groups, the inorganic phases of mesoporous structures were found with thicker walls that are amorphous and lack of crystallinity. Compared with bulk amorphous silica, the wall-domain of mesoporous silicas are less ordered withlarger fractions of three- and four-membered rings and wider ring-size distributions. It is the first molecular simulation study of explicit representations of both silicic acid condensation and surfactant self-assembly. 2012-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/647 https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1648&context=open_access_dissertations Open Access Dissertations ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst formation mechanism lattice model molecular simulation ordered nanoporous materials self-assembly silica polymerization Chemical Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic formation mechanism
lattice model
molecular simulation
ordered nanoporous materials
self-assembly
silica polymerization
Chemical Engineering
spellingShingle formation mechanism
lattice model
molecular simulation
ordered nanoporous materials
self-assembly
silica polymerization
Chemical Engineering
Jin, Lin
Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials
description Porous materials have long been a research interest due to their practical importance in traditional chemical industries such as catalysis and separation processes. The successful synthesis of porous materials requires further understanding of the fundamental physics that govern the formation of these materials. In this thesis, we apply molecular modeling methods and develop novel models to study the formation mechanism of ordered porous materials. The improved understanding provides an opportunity to rational control pore size, pore shape, surface reactivity and may lead to new design of tailor-made materials. To attain detailed structural evolution of silicate materials, an atomistic model with explicitly representation of silicon and oxygen atoms is developed. Our model is based on rigid tetrahedra (representing SiO4) occupying the sites of a body centered cubic (bcc) lattice. The model serves as the base model to study the formation of silica materials. We first carried out Monte Carlo simulations to describe the polymerization process of silica without template molecules starting from a solution of silicic acid in water at pH 2. We predicted Qn evolutions during silica polymerization and good agreement was found compared with experimental data, where Qn is the fraction of Si atoms with n bridging oxygens. The model captures the basic kinetics of silica polymerization and provides structural evolution information. Next we generalize the application of this atomic lattice model to materials with tetrahedral (T) and bridging (B) atoms and apply parallel tempering Monte Carlo methods to search for ground states. We show that the atomic lattice model can be applied to silica and related materials with a rich variety of structures including known chalcogenides, zeolite analogs, and layered materials. We find that whereas canonical Monte Carlo simulations of the model consistently produce the amorphous solids studied in our previous work, parallel tempering Monte Carlo gives rise to ordered nanoporous solids. The utility of parallel tempering highlights the existence of barriers between amorphous and crystalline phases of our model. The role of template molecules during synthesis of ordered mesoporous materials was investigated. Implemented surfactant lattice model of Larson, together with atomic tetrahedral model for silica, we successfully modeled the formation of surfactant-templated mesoporous silica (MCM-41), with explicit representation of silicic acid condensation and surfactant self-assembly. Lamellar and hexagonal mesophases form spontaneously at different synthesis conditions, consistent with published experimental observations. Under conditions where silica polymerization is negligible, reversible transformation between hexagonal and lamellar phases were observed by changing synthesis temperatures. Upon long-time simulation that allows condensation of silanol groups, the inorganic phases of mesoporous structures were found with thicker walls that are amorphous and lack of crystallinity. Compared with bulk amorphous silica, the wall-domain of mesoporous silicas are less ordered withlarger fractions of three- and four-membered rings and wider ring-size distributions. It is the first molecular simulation study of explicit representations of both silicic acid condensation and surfactant self-assembly.
author Jin, Lin
author_facet Jin, Lin
author_sort Jin, Lin
title Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials
title_short Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials
title_full Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials
title_fullStr Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the Self-Assembly of Ordered Nanoporous Materials
title_sort modeling the self-assembly of ordered nanoporous materials
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2012
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/647
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1648&context=open_access_dissertations
work_keys_str_mv AT jinlin modelingtheselfassemblyoforderednanoporousmaterials
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