Publications by authors named "Malia B Wenny"

Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers are exploring the use of machine learning interatomic potentials (MLIPs) to simulate ILs, focusing on their ability to handle mixtures and not just pure forms.
  • * The study shows that MLIPs can be trained to predict the properties of new IL mixtures and confirms their accuracy through experiments and comparisons with density functional theory (DFT).
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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers developed "microporous water," which consists of microporous nanocrystals that can transport a high density of gas molecules in water due to their unique dry, gas-accessible pores.
  • The study outlines principles for functionalizing the surfaces of these hydrophobic metal-organic frameworks with amphiphilic polymers, aiming to improve their dispersibility and stability while maintaining their pore volume.
  • Results showed that using specific block co-polymers enhances the dispersibility and hydrolytic stability of zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) in water, especially when the polymer can bond well with the metal sites on the particles' surfaces.
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The unique chemistry of fluorocarbons (in particular, their weak intermolecular interactions and high degree of intrinsic free volume) makes them promising building blocks for ionic liquids with high gas capacities. Here, we report a generalizable method for the synthesis of fluorinated ionic liquids, which relies on the evolution of gaseous byproducts to drive product formation. This synthetic strategy overcomes solubility challenges that can hinder the synthesis of highly fluorinated ionic liquids via conventional methods and enables a systematic investigation of the effect of fluorination on ionic liquid viscosity and gas solubility.

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Owing to their high tunability and predictable structures, metal-organic materials offer a powerful platform to study glass formation and crystallization processes and to design glasses with unique properties. Here, we report a novel series of glass-forming metal-ethylenebis(acetamide) networks that undergo reversible glass and crystallization transitions below 200 °C. The glass-transition temperatures, crystallization kinetics, and glass stability of these materials are readily tunable, either by synthetic modification or by liquid-phase blending, to form binary glasses.

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Liquids with permanent microporosity can absorb larger quantities of gas molecules than conventional solvents, providing new opportunities for liquid-phase gas storage, transport and reactivity. Current approaches to designing porous liquids rely on sterically bulky solvent molecules or surface ligands and, thus, are not amenable to many important solvents, including water. Here we report a generalizable thermodynamic strategy to preserve permanent microporosity and impart high gas solubilities to liquid water.

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Understanding the factors that govern gas absorption in ionic liquids is critical to the development of high-capacity solvents for catalysis, electrochemistry, and gas separations. Here, we report experimental probes of liquid structure that provide insights into how free volume impacts the O absorption properties of ionic liquids. Specifically, we establish that isothermal compressibility─measured rapidly and accurately through small-angle X-ray scattering─reports on the size distribution of transient voids within a representative series of ionic liquids and is correlated with O absorption capacity.

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The development of materials that reversibly store high densities of thermal energy is critical to the more efficient and sustainable utilization of energy. Herein, we investigate metal-organic compounds as a new class of solid-liquid phase-change materials (PCMs) for thermal energy storage. Specifically, we show that isostructural series of divalent metal amide complexes featuring extended hydrogen bond networks can undergo tunable, high-enthalpy melting transitions over a wide temperature range.

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Inorganic-organic hybrid materials such as organically templated metal oxides, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and organohalide perovskites have been studied for decades, and hydrothermal and (non-aqueous) solvothermal syntheses have produced thousands of new materials that collectively contain nearly all the metals in the periodic table. Nevertheless, the formation of these compounds is not fully understood, and development of new compounds relies primarily on exploratory syntheses. Simulation- and data-driven approaches (promoted by efforts such as the Materials Genome Initiative) provide an alternative to experimental trial-and-error.

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