Shape-persistent, conductive ionogels where both mechanical strength and ionic conductivity are enhanced are developed using multiphase materials composed of cellulose nanocrystals and hyperbranched polymeric ionic liquids (PILs) as a mechanically strong supporting network matrix for ionic liquids with an interrupted ion-conducting pathway. The integration of needlelike nanocrystals and PIL promotes the formation of multiple hydrogen bonding and electrostatic ionic interaction capacitance, resulting in the formation of interconnected networks capable of confining a high amount of ionic liquid (≈95 wt%) without losing its self-sustained shape. The resulting nanoporous and robust ionogels possess outstanding mechanical strength with a high compressive elastic modulus (≈5.6 MPa), comparable to that of tough, rubbery materials. Surprisingly, these rigid materials preserve the high ionic conductivity of original ionic liquids (≈7.8 mS cm −1 ), which are distributed within and supported by the nanocrystal network-like rigid frame. On the one hand, such stable materials possess superior ionic conductivities in comparison to traditional solid electrolytes; on the other hand, the high compression resistance and shapepersistence allow for easy handling in comparison to traditional fluidic electrolytes. The synergistic enhancement in ion transport and solid-like mechanical properties afforded by these ionogel materials make them intriguing candidates for sustainable electrodeless energy storage and harvesting matrices.
Real‐time active control of the handedness of circularly polarized light emission requires sophisticated manufacturing and structural reconfigurations of inorganic optical components that can rarely be achieved in traditional passive optical structures. Here, robust and flexible emissive optically‐doped biophotonic materials that facilitate the dynamic optical activity are reported. These optically active bio‐enabled materials with a chiral nematic‐like organization of cellulose nanocrystals with intercalated organic dye generated strong circularly polarized photoluminescence with a high asymmetric factor. Reversible phase‐shifting of the photochromic molecules intercalated into chiral nematic organization enables alternating circularly polarized light emission with on‐demand handedness. Real‐time alternating handedness can be triggered by either remote light illumination or changes in the acidic environment. This unique dynamic chiro‐optical behavior presents an efficient way to design emissive bio‐derived materials for dynamic programmable active photonic materials for optical communication, optical coding, visual protection, and visual adaptation.
Chiral metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have gained rising attention as ordered nanoporous materials for enantiomer separations, chiral catalysis, and sensing. Among those, chiral MOFs are generally obtained through complex synthetic routes by using a limited choice of reactive chiral organic precursors as the primary linkers or auxiliary ligands. Here, we report a template-controlled synthesis of chiral MOFs from achiral precursors grown on chiral nematic cellulosederived nanostructured bio-templates. We demonstrate that chiral MOFs, specifically, zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF), unc-[Zn(2-MeIm) 2 , 2-MeIm = 2-methylimidazole], can be grown from regular precursors within nanoporous organized chiral nematic nanocelluloses via directed assembly on twisted bundles of cellulose nanocrystals. The template-grown chiral ZIF possesses tetragonal crystal structure with chiral space group of P4 1 , which is different from traditional cubic crystal structure of I-43 m for freely grown conventional ZIF-8. The uniaxially compressed dimensions of the unit cell of templated ZIF and crystalline dimensions are signatures of this structure. We observe that the templated chiral ZIF can facilitate the enantiotropic sensing. It shows enantioselective recognition and chiral sensing abilities with a low limit of detection of 39 μM and the corresponding limit of chiral detection of 300 μM for representative chiral amino acid, D-and Lalanine.
Thermo-responsive ionic polymers have the ability to form adaptive and switchable morphologies, which may offer enhanced control in energy storage and catalytic applications. Current thermoresponsive polymers are composed of covalently attached thermoresponsive moieties, restricting their mobility and global dynamic response. Here, we report the synthesis and assembly at the water−air interface of symmetric and asymmetric amphiphilic thermo-responsive branched polymers with weakly ionically bound arms of amineterminated poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) macro-cations. As we observed, symmetric branched polymers formed multimolecular nanosized micellar assemblies, whereas corresponding asymmetric polymers formed large, interconnected worm-like aggregates. Dramatic changes in localized and large-scale chemical composition confirmed the reversible adsorption and desorption of the mobile PNIPAM macro-cations below and above the low critical solution temperature (LCST) and their non-uniform redistribution within polymer monolayer. Increasing the temperature above LCST led to the formation of large interconnected micellar aggregates because of the micelle-centered aggregation of the hydrophobized PNIPAM macro-cationic terminal chains in the aqueous subphase. Overall, this work provides insights into the dynamic nature of the chemical composition of branched ionic polymers with weakly ionically bound thermo-responsive terminal chains and its effect on both morphology and local/surface chemistry of monolayers at LCST transition.
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