Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica

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Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica. / Putz, Florian ; Morak, Roland; Elsässer, Michael S. et al.
In: Chemistry of materials, Vol. 29.2017, No. 18, 31.08.2017, p. 7969-7975.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Putz, F, Morak, R, Elsässer, MS, Balzer, C, Braxmeier, S, Bernardi, J, Paris, O, Reichenauer, G & Hüsing, N 2017, 'Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica', Chemistry of materials, vol. 29.2017, no. 18, pp. 7969-7975. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03032

APA

Putz, F., Morak, R., Elsässer, M. S., Balzer, C., Braxmeier, S., Bernardi, J., Paris, O., Reichenauer, G., & Hüsing, N. (2017). Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica. Chemistry of materials, 29.2017(18), 7969-7975. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03032

Vancouver

Putz F, Morak R, Elsässer MS, Balzer C, Braxmeier S, Bernardi J et al. Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica. Chemistry of materials. 2017 Aug 31;29.2017(18):7969-7975. doi: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03032

Author

Putz, Florian ; Morak, Roland ; Elsässer, Michael S. et al. / Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica. In: Chemistry of materials. 2017 ; Vol. 29.2017, No. 18. pp. 7969-7975.

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@article{02378b74610a491189ac7ee13275d6a7,
title = "Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica",
abstract = "Structural hierarchy, porosity, and isotropy/anisotropy are highly relevant factors for mechanical properties and thereby the functionality of porous materials. However, even though anisotropic and hierarchically organized, porous materials are well known in nature, such as bone or wood, producing the synthetic counterparts in the laboratory is difficult. We report for the first time a straightforward combination of sol–gel processing and shear-induced alignment to create hierarchical silica monoliths exhibiting anisotropy on the levels of both, meso- and macropores. The resulting material consists of an anisotropic macroporous network of struts comprising 2D hexagonally organized cylindrical mesopores. While the anisotropy of the mesopores is an inherent feature of the pores formed by liquid crystal templating, the anisotropy of the macropores is induced by shearing of the network. Scanning electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering show that the majority of network forming struts is oriented towards the shearing direction; a quantitative analysis of scattering data confirms that roughly 40% of the strut volume exhibits a preferred orientation. The anisotropy of the material{\textquoteright}s macroporosity is also reflected in its mechanical properties; i.e., the Young{\textquoteright}s modulus differs by nearly a factor of 2 between the directions of shear application and perpendicular to it. Unexpectedly, the adsorption-induced strain of the material exhibits little to no anisotropy.",
author = "Florian Putz and Roland Morak and Els{\"a}sser, {Michael S.} and Christian Balzer and Stephan Braxmeier and Johannes Bernardi and Oskar Paris and Gudrun Reichenauer and Nicola H{\"u}sing",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03032",
language = "English",
volume = "29.2017",
pages = "7969--7975",
journal = "Chemistry of materials",
issn = "0897-4756",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "18",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Setting Directions: Anisotropy in Hierarchically Organized Porous Silica

AU - Putz, Florian

AU - Morak, Roland

AU - Elsässer, Michael S.

AU - Balzer, Christian

AU - Braxmeier, Stephan

AU - Bernardi, Johannes

AU - Paris, Oskar

AU - Reichenauer, Gudrun

AU - Hüsing, Nicola

PY - 2017/8/31

Y1 - 2017/8/31

N2 - Structural hierarchy, porosity, and isotropy/anisotropy are highly relevant factors for mechanical properties and thereby the functionality of porous materials. However, even though anisotropic and hierarchically organized, porous materials are well known in nature, such as bone or wood, producing the synthetic counterparts in the laboratory is difficult. We report for the first time a straightforward combination of sol–gel processing and shear-induced alignment to create hierarchical silica monoliths exhibiting anisotropy on the levels of both, meso- and macropores. The resulting material consists of an anisotropic macroporous network of struts comprising 2D hexagonally organized cylindrical mesopores. While the anisotropy of the mesopores is an inherent feature of the pores formed by liquid crystal templating, the anisotropy of the macropores is induced by shearing of the network. Scanning electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering show that the majority of network forming struts is oriented towards the shearing direction; a quantitative analysis of scattering data confirms that roughly 40% of the strut volume exhibits a preferred orientation. The anisotropy of the material’s macroporosity is also reflected in its mechanical properties; i.e., the Young’s modulus differs by nearly a factor of 2 between the directions of shear application and perpendicular to it. Unexpectedly, the adsorption-induced strain of the material exhibits little to no anisotropy.

AB - Structural hierarchy, porosity, and isotropy/anisotropy are highly relevant factors for mechanical properties and thereby the functionality of porous materials. However, even though anisotropic and hierarchically organized, porous materials are well known in nature, such as bone or wood, producing the synthetic counterparts in the laboratory is difficult. We report for the first time a straightforward combination of sol–gel processing and shear-induced alignment to create hierarchical silica monoliths exhibiting anisotropy on the levels of both, meso- and macropores. The resulting material consists of an anisotropic macroporous network of struts comprising 2D hexagonally organized cylindrical mesopores. While the anisotropy of the mesopores is an inherent feature of the pores formed by liquid crystal templating, the anisotropy of the macropores is induced by shearing of the network. Scanning electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering show that the majority of network forming struts is oriented towards the shearing direction; a quantitative analysis of scattering data confirms that roughly 40% of the strut volume exhibits a preferred orientation. The anisotropy of the material’s macroporosity is also reflected in its mechanical properties; i.e., the Young’s modulus differs by nearly a factor of 2 between the directions of shear application and perpendicular to it. Unexpectedly, the adsorption-induced strain of the material exhibits little to no anisotropy.

U2 - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03032

DO - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.7b03032

M3 - Article

VL - 29.2017

SP - 7969

EP - 7975

JO - Chemistry of materials

JF - Chemistry of materials

SN - 0897-4756

IS - 18

ER -