Publications by authors named "Mark Kobrak"

Mixtures of organic acids and amines have been studied extensively owing to their unusual physicochemical properties and applications as solvents for extraction. In equimolar ratios they represent pseudoprotic ionic liquids, and in other, "nonstoichiometric" ratios they display a range of odd physicochemical behaviors. We report the results of small-angle X-ray scattering studies of a series of such systems with a range of chemical structures chosen to explore the link between molecular geometry and the character of the emergent nanoscale local liquid structure.

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In this study, we used mixtures of carboxylic acids and amines as solvents for the liquid-liquid extraction of copper salts with various anions from aqueous phase, and systematically varied the acid/amine ratio to determine its influence on extraction efficiency. The organic phases resulting from these extraction experiments were studied using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), establishing a connection between the extraction process and the liquid structure. A relationship is found between the extent of extraction for the metal salt, the strength of the Hofmeister effect of the anions of the salt, and the characteristic lengthscale of the observed liquid nanoscale structure before and after extraction.

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Complex fluids near interfaces or confined within nanoscale volumes can exhibit substantial shifts in physical properties compared to bulk, including glass transition temperature, phase separation, and crystallization. Because studies of these effects typically use thin film samples with one dimension of confinement, it is generally unclear how more extreme spatial confinement may influence these properties. In this work, we used x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy and gold nanoprobes to characterize polyethylene oxide confined by nanostructured gratings (<100nm width) and measured the viscosity in this nanoconfinement regime to be ∼500 times the bulk viscosity.

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We report experiments on the extraction of acids and bases from an aqueous phase to a pseudoprotic ionic liquid phase consisting of an equimolar mixture of trihexylamine and octanoic acid. We observed the extraction of a wide range of acids and bases, and investigated the mechanism of extraction in detail. Our results confirmed the observation of the Hofmeister effect in these systems reported in our previous work, where the extent of the extraction of copper salts was significantly influenced by the interactions between extracted inorganic anions and the organic phase.

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We report the results of X-ray scattering, physical, and spectroscopic measurements on a series of water-saturated trialkylamine/carboxylic acid mixtures. The results demonstrate the existence of well-defined nanoscale structures in bulk liquid mixtures at specific acid : amine ratios. These structures are analogous to those observed in ionic liquids but are driven by the formation of a hydrogen-bonded network rather than via inter-ion Coulomb forces.

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The selective extraction of metals from aqueous mixtures has generally relied on the use of selective ionophores. We present an alternative strategy that exploits a recently developed approach to extraction into an ionic liquid phase, and show that a high degree of control over selectivity can be obtained by tuning the relative concentrations of extraction agents. A thermodynamic model for the approach is presented, and an experimental separation of strontium and potassium ions is performed.

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We present a novel mechanism for the extraction of metals from aqueous phases to room-temperature ionic liquids (ILs) by use of a high-temperature salt as an extraction agent. The mechanism capitalizes on the fact that charged metal complexes are soluble in ILs; this allows for extraction of charged complexes rather than the neutral species, which are formed by conventional approaches. The use of a well-chosen extraction agent also suppresses the competing ion-exchange mechanism, thus preventing degradation of the ionic liquid.

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Electrodes with highly porous morphologies are of great technological interest, as their exceptionally high specific surface areas make them ideal for use in capacitors, battery electrodes and electrochemical sensors. There is a large body of research focusing on the structure of confined electrolytes in these systems, but the majority of these studies focus on cases where the length scale of the porous domain is equal to or less than the Debye screening length of the electrolyte. In this work, we use a thermodynamic model to consider the structure of electrolytes in mesoscale domains, where the pore dimensions are significantly larger than the Debye screening length.

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A combination of analytical theory and molecular dynamics simulation was previously used to investigate how the dynamics of a fused salt are affected by the distributions of mass and charge in its component ions. These studies are now extended by using instantaneous normal mode analysis to explore how changes in ionic structure affect translational and rotational dynamics at different frequencies. The results indicate that the details of the charge distribution are important in coupling translational and rotational motion in ionic liquids.

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Ionic liquids have attracted a great deal of attention as media for chemical processes, but many fundamental questions about their behavior remain unanswered. Their electrostatic character remains particularly mysterious, and a number of theoretical studies have attempted to address it using various models. These models often make use of a dipolar description of the charge distribution of an ion, or the dielectric continuum model for the medium.

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The distribution of charge in an ion of a fused salt is known to be an important determinant of liquid dynamics. However, the details of this relationship remain poorly understood. We present the results of molecular dynamics simulations on a model molten salt system and show that changes in the distribution of ionic charge can have a profound effect on liquid dynamics.

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We investigate the relationship between ionic structure and viscosity in room-temperature ionic liquids. We build on an earlier theoretical work and derive an ionic property we call the charge lever moment (CLM) that provides insight on ionic liquid dynamics. We use electronic structure calculations to determine the CLM for ions in typical ionic liquids and demonstrate a correlation between this property and the experimental viscosities of ionic liquids.

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The solvation dynamics of ionic liquids have been the subject of many experimental and theoretical studies but remain poorly understood. We analyze these dynamics by modeling the time-resolved fluorescence response of coumarin 153 in two room-temperature ionic liquids: 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium bromide and 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide. Our results demonstrate that phenomena such as electrostatic screening operate significantly differently in the two liquids, and the relative importance of translational and rovibrational components of the ionic response depends significantly on the character of the ions involved.

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Ionic liquids represent a novel and poorly understood class of solvents, and one challenge in understanding these systems is how one should view the electrostatic character of solute-solvent interactions. The highly structured nature of a fused salt makes a dielectric continuum approximation difficult to implement, and there is no obvious connection between the structure of an individual ion and the polarization character of the medium. We address this problem by making the ansatz that rather than polarizing the medium, the solute may be viewed as intercalating in the charge distribution of the neat liquid such that the solvent screens the electric field of the solute.

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The solvation dynamics of ionic liquids have been the subject of intense experimental study but remain poorly understood. We present the results of molecular dynamics simulations of the solvation dynamics of the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate in response to photoexcitation of the fluorescent dye coumarin-153. We reproduce the time-resolved fluorescence Stokes shift using linear response theory, then use novel statistical techniques to analyze cation and anion contributions to the signal.

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A common technique for the numerical calculation of free energies involves estimation of the probability density along a given coordinate from a set of configurations generated via simulation. The process requires discretization of one or more reaction coordinates to generate a histogram from which the continuous probability density is inferred. We show that the finite size of the intervals used to construct the histogram leads to quantifiable systematic error.

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