Alexander A. Teran
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by Alexander A. Teran.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014
Tod A. Pascal; Kevin H. Wujcik; Juan J. Velasco-Velez; Chenghao Wu; Alexander A. Teran; Mukes Kapilashrami; Jordi Cabana; Jinghua Guo; Miquel Salmeron; Nitash P. Balsara; David Prendergast
The X-ray absorption spectra (XAS) of lithium polysulfides (Li2Sx) of various chain lengths (x) dissolved in a model solvent are obtained from first-principles calculations. The spectra exhibit two main absorption features near the sulfur K-edge, which are unambiguously interpreted as a pre-edge near 2471 eV due to the terminal sulfur atoms at either end of the linear polysulfide dianions and a main-edge near 2473 eV due to the (x - 2) internal atoms in the chain, except in the case of Li2S2, which only has a low-energy feature. We find an almost linear dependence between the ratio of the peaks and chain length, although the linear dependence is modified by the delocalized, molecular nature of the core-excited states that can span up to six neighboring sulfur atoms. Thus, our results indicate that the ratio of the peak area, and not the peak intensities, should be used when attempting to differentiate the polysulfides from XAS.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014
Alexander A. Teran; Nitash P. Balsara
Ion-containing block copolymers are of interest for applications such as electrolytes in rechargeable lithium batteries. The addition of salt to these materials is necessary to make them conductive; however, even small amounts of salt can have significant effects on the phase behavior of these materials and consequently on their ion-transport and mechanical properties. As a result, the effect of salt addition on block copolymer thermodynamics has been the subject of significant interest over the past decade. This feature article describes a comprehensive study of the thermodynamics of block copolymer/salt mixtures over a wide range of molecular weights, compositions, salt concentrations, and temperatures. The Flory-Huggins interaction parameter was determined by fitting small-angle X-ray scattering data of disordered systems to predictions based on the random phase approximation. Experiments on neat block copolymers revealed that the Flory-Huggins parameter is a strong function of chain length. Experiments on block copolymer/salt mixtures revealed a highly nonlinear dependence of the Flory-Huggins parameter on salt concentration. These findings are a significant departure from previous results and indicate the need for improved theories for describing thermodynamic interactions in neat and salt-containing block copolymers.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Jing Sun; Alexander A. Teran; Xunxun Liao; Nitash P. Balsara; Ronald N. Zuckermann
Atomic level synthetic control over a polymers chemical structure can reveal new insights into the crystallization kinetics of block copolymers. Here, we explore the impact of side chain structure on crystallization behavior, by designing a series of sequence-defined, highly monodisperse peptoid diblock copolymers poly-N-decylglycine-block-poly-N-2-(2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethoxy)ethylglycine (pNdc-b-pNte) with volume fraction of pNte (ϕNte) values ranging from 0.29 to 0.71 and polydispersity indices ≤1.00017. Both monomers have nearly identical molecular volumes, but the pNte block is amorphous while the pNdc block is crystalline. We demonstrate by X-ray scattering and calorimetry that all the block copolypeptoids self-assemble into lamellar microphases and that the self-assembly is driven by crystallization of the pNdc block. Interestingly, the microphase separated pNdc-b-pNte diblock copolymers form two distinct crystalline phases. Crystallization of the normally amorphous pNte chains is induced by the preorganization of the crystalline pNdc chains. We hypothesize that this is due to the similarity of chemical structure of the monomers (both monomers have linear side chains of similar lengths emanating from a polyglycine backbone). The pNte block remains amorphous when the pNdc block is replaced by another crystalline block, poly-N-isoamylglycine, suggesting that a close matching of the lattice spacings is required for induced crystallization. To our knowledge, there are no previous reports of crystallization of a polymer chain induced by microphase separation. These investigations show that polypeptoids provide a unique platform for examining the effect of intertwined roles of side chain organization on the thermodynamic properties of diblock copolymers.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Jing Sun; Alexander A. Teran; Xunxun Liao; Nitash P. Balsara; Ronald N. Zuckermann
Microphase-separated block copolymer materials have a wide array of potential applications ranging from nanoscale lithography to energy storage. Our understanding of the factors that govern the morphology of these systems is based on comparisons between theory and experiment. The theories generally assume that the chains are perfectly monodisperse; however, typical experimental copolymer preparations have polydispersity indices (PDIs) ranging from 1.01 to 1.10. In contrast, we present a systematic study of the relationship between chemical structure and morphology in the solid state using peptoid diblock copolymers with PDIs of ≤1.00013. A series of comb-like peptoid block copolymers, poly(N-2-(2-(2-methoxyethoxy)ethoxy)ethylglycine)-block-poly(N-(2-ethylhexyl)glycine) (pNte-b-pNeh), were obtained by solid-phase synthesis. The number of monomers per chain was held fixed at 36, while the volume fraction of the Nte block (ϕNte) was varied from 0.11 to 0.65. The experimentally determined order-disorder transition temperature exhibited a maximum at ϕNte = 0.24, not ϕNte = 0.5 as expected from theory. All of the ordered phases had a lamellar morphology, even in the case of ϕNte = 0.11. Our results are in qualitative disagreement with all known theories of microphase separation in block copolymers. This raises new questions about the intertwined roles of monomer architecture and polydispersity in the phase behavior of diblock copolymers.
Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2012
Gregory M. Stone; Scott A. Mullin; Alexander A. Teran; Daniel T. Hallinan; Andrew M. Minor; Alexander Hexemer; Nitash P. Balsara
Macromolecules | 2013
Rodger Yuan; Alexander A. Teran; Inna Gurevitch; Scott A. Mullin; Nisita S. Wanakule; Nitash P. Balsara
Macromolecules | 2010
Nisita S. Wanakule; Justin M. Virgili; Alexander A. Teran; Zhen-Gang Wang; Nitash P. Balsara
Solid State Ionics | 2011
Alexander A. Teran; Maureen H. Tang; Scott A. Mullin; Nitash P. Balsara
Macromolecules | 2014
Mahati Chintapalli; X. Chelsea Chen; Jacob L. Thelen; Alexander A. Teran; Xin Wang; Bruce A. Garetz; Nitash P. Balsara
Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2013
Inna Gurevitch; Raffaella Buonsanti; Alexander A. Teran; Bernd Gludovatz; Robert O. Ritchie; Jordi Cabana; Nitash P. Balsara