Abstract
Molecular solar thermal energy storage materials (MOST) are a promising method for renewable energy storage that capture solar energy and release it on-demand as heat. Azobenzene is attractive for MOST applications due to its photoreversible, E-Z isomerization. Recently, phase-change materials have been formed using azobenzene to increase its energy-storage capacity; however, these condensed phases often lower the azobenzene isomerization degree, which is only recovered on dissolution. In this work, sparing solvent addition is used to drive the self-assembly of azobenzene photosurfactants (AzoPS) into lyotropic liquid crystal (LLC) phases, which are explored for MOST applications for the first time.
Using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), polarized optical microscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), we show that the structure, isomerization behavior, and energy-storage properties of these light-responsive LLCs can be systematically tuned by adjusting the photosurfactant structure, solvent, and concentration. Furthermore, by developing a method that combines SAXS with in-situ DSC, we directly correlate the isomerization-induced LLC phase transitions to their energy-storage contributions. The formation of LLC phases through solvent addition both enhances the isomerization degree (by up to 20%) and amplifies the structural disordering on isomerization, resulting in energy-storage densities of up to 123 J g-1. The ability to tune both the structure and isomerization properties in LLC materials suggests significant promise for MOST applications. In addition, the combination of advanced characterization methods used to establish the structure-isomerization-enthalpy (LLC-photoswitch-phase change) relationships provides unique insight into these multicomponent systems and accelerates the design pathways to future iterations for competitive solar energy storage devices.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Materials and experimental methods; Synthesis and chemical characterization of AzoPS; Calculations for molecular geometry of AzoPS; Characterization of AzoPS thermotropic LC mesophases; Characterization of AzoPS LLC mesophases; Temperature-dependence of AzoPS-water LLCs; Characterization of AzoPS-Ethylene glycol LLCs; Isomerization studies; Characterization of AzoPS-D2O LLCs; Determination of AzoPS Thermal Half-Life; SAXS with in-situ DSC for UV-irradiated AzoPS LCs; DSC thermograms for UV-Irradiated AzoPS; Density Functional Theory calculations (PDF)
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