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Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition

An engineered nanoporous carbon scaffold (NCS) consisting of a 3-D interconnected 85 nm nanopore network was used here as a model material to investigate the nanoscale transport of liquids as a function of the polarity and magnitude of an applied potential (‘electro-imbibition’), all in 1 M KCl solu...

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Autores principales: Pan, Bin, Valappil, Manila Ozhukil, Rateick, Richard, Clarkson, Christopher R., Tong, Xia, Debuhr, Chris, Ghanizadeh, Amin, Birss, Viola I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9906640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36794181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc05705k
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author Pan, Bin
Valappil, Manila Ozhukil
Rateick, Richard
Clarkson, Christopher R.
Tong, Xia
Debuhr, Chris
Ghanizadeh, Amin
Birss, Viola I.
author_facet Pan, Bin
Valappil, Manila Ozhukil
Rateick, Richard
Clarkson, Christopher R.
Tong, Xia
Debuhr, Chris
Ghanizadeh, Amin
Birss, Viola I.
author_sort Pan, Bin
collection PubMed
description An engineered nanoporous carbon scaffold (NCS) consisting of a 3-D interconnected 85 nm nanopore network was used here as a model material to investigate the nanoscale transport of liquids as a function of the polarity and magnitude of an applied potential (‘electro-imbibition’), all in 1 M KCl solution. A camera was used to track both meniscus formation and meniscus jump, front motion dynamics, and droplet expulsion, while also quantifying the electrocapillary imbibition height (H) as a function of the applied potential of the NCS material. Although no imbibition was seen over a wide range of potentials, at positive potentials (+1.2 V vs. the potential of zero charge (pzc)), imbibition was correlated with carbon surface electro-oxidation, as confirmed by both electrochemistry and post-imbibition surface analysis, with gas evolution (O(2), CO(2)) seen visually only after imbibition was well underway. At negative potentials, vigorous hydrogen evolution reaction was observed at the NCS/KCl solution interface, well before imbibition began at −0.5 V(pzc), proposed to be nucleated by an electrical double layer charging-driven meniscus jump, followed by processes such as Marangoni flow, adsorption induced deformation, and hydrogen pressure driven flow. This study improves the understanding of electrocapillary imbibition at the nanoscale, being highly relevant in a wide range of multidisciplinary practical applications, including in energy storage and conversion devices, energy-efficient desalination, and electrical-integrated nanofluidics design.
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spelling pubmed-99066402023-02-14 Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition Pan, Bin Valappil, Manila Ozhukil Rateick, Richard Clarkson, Christopher R. Tong, Xia Debuhr, Chris Ghanizadeh, Amin Birss, Viola I. Chem Sci Chemistry An engineered nanoporous carbon scaffold (NCS) consisting of a 3-D interconnected 85 nm nanopore network was used here as a model material to investigate the nanoscale transport of liquids as a function of the polarity and magnitude of an applied potential (‘electro-imbibition’), all in 1 M KCl solution. A camera was used to track both meniscus formation and meniscus jump, front motion dynamics, and droplet expulsion, while also quantifying the electrocapillary imbibition height (H) as a function of the applied potential of the NCS material. Although no imbibition was seen over a wide range of potentials, at positive potentials (+1.2 V vs. the potential of zero charge (pzc)), imbibition was correlated with carbon surface electro-oxidation, as confirmed by both electrochemistry and post-imbibition surface analysis, with gas evolution (O(2), CO(2)) seen visually only after imbibition was well underway. At negative potentials, vigorous hydrogen evolution reaction was observed at the NCS/KCl solution interface, well before imbibition began at −0.5 V(pzc), proposed to be nucleated by an electrical double layer charging-driven meniscus jump, followed by processes such as Marangoni flow, adsorption induced deformation, and hydrogen pressure driven flow. This study improves the understanding of electrocapillary imbibition at the nanoscale, being highly relevant in a wide range of multidisciplinary practical applications, including in energy storage and conversion devices, energy-efficient desalination, and electrical-integrated nanofluidics design. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-12-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9906640/ /pubmed/36794181 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc05705k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Pan, Bin
Valappil, Manila Ozhukil
Rateick, Richard
Clarkson, Christopher R.
Tong, Xia
Debuhr, Chris
Ghanizadeh, Amin
Birss, Viola I.
Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
title Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
title_full Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
title_fullStr Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
title_full_unstemmed Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
title_short Hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
title_sort hydrophobic nanoporous carbon scaffolds reveal the origin of polarity-dependent electrocapillary imbibition
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9906640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36794181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc05705k
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