City
Epaper

Study reveals how bromide ions cause ripples in semiclathrate hydrates

By ANI | Updated: July 26, 2023 22:05 IST

Osaka [Japan], July 26 : Understanding and maximising the characteristics of proton-conducting materials depends greatly on how water molecules ...

Open in App

Osaka [Japan], July 26 : Understanding and maximising the characteristics of proton-conducting materials depends greatly on how water molecules behave in these materials. To detect changes in the speed of the water, it is necessary to be able to look at extremely quick pictures. Semiclathrate hydrate crystals have been closely examined by Osaka University researchers utilising quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS).

The findings of the study were  published in Applied Physics Letters.

Semiclathrate hydrates have water molecule frameworks that house other molecules or ions as ‘guests’ in their structures. The overall properties of the framework can therefore be controlled and tailored to particular requirements by introducing different guests.

However, some of the best proton conductors are highly acidic solutions and are difficult to be handled. Solid electrolyte alternatives are therefore needed. Tetra-n-butylammonium bromide (TBAB) semiclathrate hydrate is known to be a promising solid electrolyte, but the mechanism behind its performance has been unclear.

The researchers took a close look at the water molecule dynamics in TBAB semiclathrate hydrate using QENS. This allowed motions of the water molecules to be captured over much shorter periods than have been achieved with other techniques, providing a clearer picture of what is happening.

“The transfer of protons in the semiclathrate hydrate is suspended by the water molecules,” explains study lead author Jin Shimada. “The way the water molecules then reorient—their reorientation motion—then tells us about what might be affecting the conduction.”

QENS showed that water molecules in the crystal reorientate themselves very rapidly in much shorter times than have previously been measured. In addition, the energy needed to prompt the change is consistent with that needed to break a hydrogen bond, the type of interaction that occurs between the guest ions and the water molecules.

It is believed that the large bromide ion that forms part of TBAB activates the water to behave as it would around bromide in aqueous solution.

“The insight we have gained into TBAB semiclathrate hydrate provides an excellent grounding for future innovation,” says senior author Takeshi Sugahara. “We believe the findings will contribute to the development of batteries and thermal storage materials.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi BMW Crash: Victim’s Wife Alleges Driver Took Couple 19 Km Away to Family-Owned Hospital, Causing Fatal Delay

NationalDelhi: Fire Breaks Out in Gaffar Market, Karol Bagh; Four Fire Tenders Rush to Spot

NationalDelhi: Finance Ministry Officer Killed, Wife Critical After BMW Crash Near Dhaula Kuan

NationalBuilding Smart Cities with India’s Highest-Selling Excavator

NationalBomb Threat at Max Hospital: Delhi Police and Bomb Squad Launch Search Operations

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIIT Kharagpur to teach BS courses in AI and Data Science in Bengali

TechnologyIndia aims to become top automobile manufacturing nation in 5 years: Nitin Gadkari

TechnologyDonald Trump announces deal with China on TikTok

TechnologyKerala HC to introduce WhatsApp messaging for case updates from October

TechnologyAI plays transformative role in education, healthcare, and agriculture sectors: Ashwini Vaishnaw