The behavior of nematic liquid crystal (LC) Merck Phase 4 confined to controlled pore glass (CPG) materials was investigated using 129Xe nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of xenon gas dissolved in the LC. The average pore diameters of the materials varied from 81 to 2917 A, and the measurements were carried out within a wide temperature range (approximately 185-370 K). The spectra contain lots of information about the effect of confinement on the phase of the LC. The theoretical model of shielding of noble gases dissolved in liquid crystals on the basis of pairwise additivity approximation was applied to the analysis of the spectra. When pore diameter is small, smaller than approximately 150 A, xenon experiences on average an isotropic environment inside the pore, and no nematic-isotropic phase transition is observed. When the size is larger than approximately 150 A, nematic phase is observed, and the LC molecules are oriented along pore axis. The orientational order parameter of the LC, S, increases with increasing pore size. In the largest pores, the orientation of the molecules deviates from the pore axis direction to magnetic field direction, which implies that the size of the pores (approximately 3000 A) is close to magnetic coherence length. The decrease of magnetic coherence length with increasing temperature is clearly seen from the spectra. When the sample is cooled rapidly by immersing it in liquid nitrogen, xenon atoms do not squeeze out from the solid, as they do during gradual freezing, but they are occluded inside the solid lattice, and their chemical shift is very sensitive to crystal structure. This makes it possible to study the effect of confinement on the solid phases. According to the measured 129Xe NMR spectra, possibly three different solid phases are observed from bulk liquid crystal in the used temperature region. The same is also seen from the samples containing larger pores (pore size larger than approximately 500 A), and the solid-solid phase-transition temperatures are the same. However, no first-order solid-solid phase transitions are observed from the smaller pores. Melting point depression, that is, the depression of solid-nematic transition temperature observed from the pores as compared with that in bulk LC, is seen to be very sensitive to the pore size, and it can be used for the determination of pore size of an unknown material.
Two-dimensional (129)Xe exchange spectroscopy (EXSY) NMR measurements are presented for xenon atoms dissolved in a thermotropic nematic Liquid Crystal (LC), Merck Phase 4, confined to a mesoporous Controlled-Pore Glass (CPG) material with an average pore diameter of 81 A. Experiments were carried out as a function of mixing time at two different temperatures in which Phase 4 appears in nematic and isotropic phases. The exchange rate constants of xenon atoms between two different sites were determined utilizing the intensities of diagonal and off-diagonal signals measured in the EXSY spectra. In the studied system, the sites are: (a) xenon dissolved in the bulk LC between the CPG particles; and (b) xenon in the LC confined inside the pores. The diffusion rate of xenon atoms between the various sites was observed to be very slow.
The behavior of thermotropic nematic liquid crystals (LCs) Merck Phase 4 and ZLI 1115 confined to mesoporous controlled pore glass materials was investigated using 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of probe molecules methyl iodide and methane. The average pore diameters of the materials varied from 81 to 375 A, and the temperature series measurements were performed on solid, nematic, and isotropic phases of bulk LCs. Chemical shift, intensity, and line shape of the resonance signals in the spectra contain lots of information about the effect of confinement on the state of the LCs. The line shape of the 13C resonances of the CH3I molecules in LCs confined into the pores was observed to be even more sensitive to the LC orientation distribution than, for example, that of 2H spectra of deuterated LCs or 129Xe spectra of dissolved xenon gas. The effect of the magnetic field on the orientation of LC molecules inside the pores was examined in four different magnetic fields varying from 4.70 to 11.74 T. The magnetic field was found to have significant effect on the orientation of LC molecules in the largest pores and close to the nematic-isotropic phase transition temperature. The theoretical model of shielding of noble gases dissolved in LCs based on pairwise additivity approximation was utilized in the analysis of CH4 spectra. For the first time, a first-order nematic-isotropic phase transition was detected to take place inside such restrictive hosts. In the larger pores a few degrees below the nematic-isotropic phase transition of bulk LC the 13C quartet of CH3I changes as a powder pattern. Results are compared to those derived from 129Xe NMR measurements of xenon gas in similar environments.
An alternative NMR method for determining nuclear shielding anisotropies in molecules is proposed. The method is quite simple, linear and particularly applicable for heteronuclear spin systems. In the technique, molecules of interest are dissolved in a thermotropic liquid crystal (LC) which is confined in a mesoporous material, such as controlled pore glass (CPG) used in this study. CPG materials consist of roughly spherical particles with a randomly oriented and connected pore network inside. LC Merck Phase 4 was confined in the pores of average diameter from 81 to 375 A and LC Merck ZLI 1115 in the pores of average diameter 81 A. In order to demonstrate the functionality of the method, the (13)C shielding anisotropy of (13)C-enriched methyl iodide, (13)CH(3)I, was determined as a function of temperature using one dimensional (13)C NMR spectroscopy. Methane gas, (13)CH(4), was used as an internal chemical shift reference. It appeared that methyl iodide molecules experience on average an isotropic environment in LCs inside the smallest pores within the whole temperature range studied, ranging from bulk solid to isotropic phase. In contrast, in the spaces in between the particles, whose diameter is approximately 150 microm, LCs behave as in the bulk. Consequently, isotropic values of the shielding tensor can be determined from spectra arising from molecules inside the pores at exactly the same temperature as the anisotropic ones from molecules outside the pores. Thus, for the first time in the solution state, shielding anisotropies can easily be determined as a function of temperature. The effects of pore size as well as of different LC media on the shielding anisotropy are examined and discussed.
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