Publikationen
Plank, Martina | Hartmann, Frank | Kuttich, Björn | Kraus, Tobias | Gallei, Markus
DOI:
Within this work, well-defined polystyrene-block-poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (PS-b-PHEMA) and a non-polar model block copolymer (BCP) polystyrene-block-polybutadiene (PS-b-PB) have been prepared via sequential anionic polymerization and investigated with respect to their capability of microphase separation in the presence of cellulose fibres. Both the original morphologies in the bulk state as well as the microphase-separated structures in the vicinity of cellulose fibres were investigated by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements. BCP series featuring molar masses below 70 kg mol−1 and higher molar masses up to 201 kg mol−1 have been subjected to solvent-casting and subsequent thermal annealing to elucidate the microstructures in the presence or absence of cellulose fibres with defined contents of water. Besides the classical morphologies comprising spheres, cylinders and lamellae, also gyroidal and helical-domains were observed. Moreover, a significant impact on the degree of domain order and orientation was found for the PHEMA-containing BCPs based on the hydroxyl moiety interactions of the cellulose fibres and respective PHEMA block segments.
Zhang, Long | Chao, Dongliang | Yang, Peihua | Weber, Louis | Li, Jia | Kraus, Tobias | Fan, Hong Jin
DOI:
Abstract Direct inkjet printing of functional inks is an emerging and promising technique for the fabrication of electrochemical energy storage devices. Electrochromic energy devices combine electrochromic and energy storage functions, providing a rising and burgeoning technology for next-generation intelligent power sources. However, printing such devices has, in the past, required additives or other second phase materials in order to create inks with suitable rheological properties, which can lower printed device performance. Here, tungsten oxide nanocrystal inks are formulated without any additives for the printing of high-quality tungsten oxide thin films. This allows the assembly of novel electrochromic pseudocapacitive zinc-ion devices, which exhibit a relatively high capacity (≈260 C g−1 at 1 A g−1) with good cycling stability, a high coloration efficiency, and fast switching response. These results validate the promising features of inkjet-printed electrochromic zinc-ion energy storage devices in a wide range of applications in flexible electronic devices, energy-saving buildings, and intelligent systems.
Liu, Zhen | Zhang, Peng | Kister, Thomas | Kraus, Tobias | Volmer, Dietrich A.
DOI:
A series of ultrathin, homogenous gold nanoparticle (AuNP) substrates for surface-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (SALDI-MS) were prepared using a simple air/water interface approach. These SALDI substrates enabled soft ionization and provided significant improvements in terms of signal intensities and reduced background levels in comparison to other AuNP morphologies for different analytes such as fatty acids, peptides, amino acids, saccharides, and drugs. Through different microscopic and spectroscopic methods, we determined that the packing homogeneity of the [AuNP]n substrates played a vital role in the efficiency of the SALDI process. We demonstrated that the signal intensities of the investigated analytes were readily optimized by manipulating the thickness of the [AuNP]n substrates. The desorption/ionization efficiency increased as a function of the number of layers and then reached a saturation point. The optimized [AuNP]n substrates not only exhibited high SALDI-MS desorption/ionization efficiencies but also showed excellent reproducibilities of the analyte signals.
Fleischmann, Simon | Dörr, Tobias S. | Frank, Anna | Hieke, Stefan W. | Doblas-Jimenez, David | Scheu, Christina | Oliveira, Peter William de | Kraus, Tobias | Presser, Volker
DOI:
Abstract Transition metal dichalcogenides are attractive two-dimensional electrode materials for electrochemical energy storage devices due to their high reversible charge storage capacity. Hybridization of these materials with carbon promises enhanced performance by facilitating the access to reactive sites and extended mechanical stabilization. Herein, we introduce a NbS2/C hybrid material exhibiting a gyroidal microstructure synthesized through macromolecular co-assembly of a tailored block copolymer and an organometallic niobium precursor and subsequent sulfidation. Our synthesis allows the preparation of mechanically stable monoliths with NbS2 nanocrystals engulfed in a highly porous carbon shell. Due to the curvature of the gyroidal structure, abundant reactive sites are exposed that lead to an attractive performance in a lithium-containing electrolyte with a capacity of up to 400 mAh/g.
Pelz, Alexander | Dörr, Tobias S. | Zhang, Peng | Oliveira, Peter William de | Winter, Martin | Wiemhöfer, Hans-Dieter | Kraus, Tobias
DOI:
Block copolymers are promising materials for electrolytes in lithium metal batteries that can be tuned by changing the individual blocks to independently optimize ion transport as well as electrochemical and mechanical stability. We explored the performance of electrolytes based on modified triblock copolymers poly(isoprene)-block-poly(styrene)-block-poly(ethylene oxide). Large polyethylene oxide (PEO) blocks with a molecular mass of 53 kg mol-1 allowed only for low lithium salt loadings and led to poor ionic conductivity below 60 °C. However, we found that unusually small molecular weight of the ion solvating PEO blocks down to 2 kg mol-1 enabled polymer-in-salt loadings of up to 5:1 Li:EO. A superior total ionic conductivity greater than 1 mS cm-1 was found for optimized compositions above 0 °C with remarkably low temperature dependence in a wide range from -20 °C to 90 °C. We believe that highly ordered 2D lamellae from controlled self-assembly established a beneficial environment for ionic transport with ionic mobility decoupled from segmental polymer motion. This also explains lithium ion transference numbers as high as 0.7 were obtained for the high conductivity samples.
Zhang, Peng | Rothkirch, André | Koch, Marcus | Roth, Stephan | Kraus, Tobias
DOI:
Abstract This work studies the surface facets of gold nanorods (AuNRs) in wet-coated nanoparticle thin films with synchrotron-light-based grazing-incidence wide angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS), which provides statistically relevant results on many nanoparticles. Air-brush spraying deposits the monodisperse AuNRs into sparse monolayers where the long axis of rods is parallel to the substrate surface. It is found that the crystalline facets of individual AuNRs in the sparse monolayer are all in the same orientation, as indicated by narrow azimuthal widths of (200) reflections, over a macroscopic scale comparable to the substrate. This alignment is probably due to the rods' sitting on high-index surface facets such as (520) and (250). A quantitative analysis of the angles between bulk facets and the surface facets leads to a “nested-octagon” model for the cross sections of AuNRs: shell octagon with high-index crystalline facets (520), (5-20), (2-50), (-2-50), (-5-20), (-520), (-250), and (250), and core octagon consisting of low-index crystalline facets (100), (1-10), (0-10), (-1-10), (-100), (-110), (010), and (110).
Bettscheider, Simon | Kraus, Tobias | Fleck, Norman A.
DOI:
The break-up of a nanowire with an organic ligand shell into discrete droplets is analysed in terms of the Rayleigh-Plateau instability. Explicit account is taken of the effect of the organic ligand shell upon the energetics and kinetics of surface diffusion in the wire. Both an initial perturbation analysis and a full numerical analysis of the evolution in wire morphology are conducted, and the governing non-dimensional groups are identified. The perturbation analysis is remarkably accurate in obtaining the main features of the instability, including the pinch-off time and the resulting diameter of the droplets. It is conjectured that the surface energy of the wire and surrounding organic shell depends upon both the mean and deviatoric invariants of the curvature tensor. Such a behaviour allows for the possibility of a stable nanowire such that the Rayleigh-Plateau instability is not energetically favourable. A stability map illustrates this. Maps are also constructed for the final droplet size and pinch-off time as a function of two non-dimensional groups that characterise the energetics and kinetics of diffusion in the presence of the organic shell. These maps can guide future experimental activity on the stabilisation of nanowires by organic ligand shells.
Doblas, David | Kister, Thomas | Cano-Bonilla, Marina | González-García, Lola | Kraus, Tobias
DOI:
We studied the concentration-dependent agglomeration of apolar nanoparticles in different solvents. Octanethiol-stabilized gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in evaporating liquid droplets were observed in situ using small-angle X-ray scattering. Concurrent analysis of liquid volume and particle agglomeration provided time-dependent absolute concentrations of free and agglomerated particles. All dispersions underwent an initial stage where the particle concentration increased but no agglomerates formed. Subsequently, agglomeration started at concentrations that varied by several orders of magnitude for different solvents. While agglomerates grew, the concentration of the dispersed particles remained at a constant “colloidal solubility” in most solvents. We consistently found that the colloidal stability of AuNPs decreased as cyclohexane > heptane > nonane > decane > toluene and suggest that details of the molecular interactions between solvent and ligand shell set this order.
Gao, Hongyu | Bettscheider, Simon | Kraus, Tobias | Müser, Martin H.
DOI:
Surfaces with surface-bound ligand molecules generally attract each other when immersed in poor solvents but repel each other in good solvents. While this common wisdom holds, for example, for oleylamine-ligated ultrathin nanowires in the poor solvent ethanol, the same nanowires were recently observed experimentally to bundle even when immersed in the good solvent n-hexane. To elucidate the respective binding mechanisms, we simulate both systems using molecular dynamics. In the case of ethanol, the solvent is completely depleted at the interface between two ligand shells so that their binding occurs, as expected, via direct interactions between ligands. In the case of n-hexane, ligands attached to different nanowires do not touch. The binding occurs because solvent molecules penetrating the shells preferentially orient their backbone normal to the wire, whereby they lose entropy. This entropy does not have to be summoned a second time when the molecules penetrate another nanowire. For the mechanism to be effective, the ligand density appears to best be intermediate, that is, small enough to allow solvent molecules to penetrate, but not so small that ligands do not possess a clear preferred orientation at the interface to the solvent. At the same time, solvent molecules may be neither too large nor too small for similar reasons. Experiments complementing the simulations confirm the predicted trends.
Hegetschweiler, Andreas | Borovinskaya, Olga | Staudt, Thorsten | Kraus, Tobias
DOI:
We introduce a new method for the characterization of particles extracted from steels. Microalloyed steels were dissolved to extract niobium and titanium carbonitride particles, which are of critical importance for the mechanical properties of the steel. The size distribution and chemical composition of the particles were analyzed by single-particle inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and compared to results from electron microscopy. Mass spectrometry rapidly provided data on a large number of particles (>2000 in 1 min) and indicated two particle populations that differed in size and composition: smaller particles contained only niobium, whereas larger particles contained both niobium and titanium. Electron microscopy of a much smaller number of particles confirmed the results and indicated that the larger particles had complex, overgrown structures. The combination of single-particle mass spectrometry and electron microscopy enables a better understanding of the precipitation processes that form the particles during steel production at different stages of the thermomechanical-rolling process. A better understanding of the processes helps to improve the rolling process in order to exploit the alloying elements optimally.

