Huiming Xiong
University of Akron
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Featured researches published by Huiming Xiong.
Soft Matter | 2006
Hong Shen; Kwang-Un Jeong; Huiming Xiong; Matthew J. Graham; Siwei Leng; Joseph X. Zheng; Huabing Huang; Mingming Guo; Frank W. Harris; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
A series of symmetrically tapered 1,4-bis[3,4,5-tris(alkan-1-yloxy)benzamido] benzene bisamides (CPhBA, where is the number of carbon atoms in the alkyl chains, = 10, 12 and 16), was synthesized in order to investigate the effect of alkyl chain length on supra-molecular ordered structures induced by hydrogen (H)-bonding and micro-phase separation. These bisamides consist of a rigid aromatic bisamide core with three flexible alkyl chains at each end of the core. Major phase transitions and their origins in CPhBA bisamides were studied with differential scanning calorimetry, one-dimensional (1D) wide angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD), infrared spectroscopy, and solid-state carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance experiments. The structures of these compounds in different phases were identified using 2D WAXD from oriented samples and were also confirmed by selected area electron diffractions in transmission electron microscopy from stacked single crystals and by computer simulations. All of the CPhBA bisamides in this series formed a highly ordered oblique columnar () phase and a low-ordered oblique columnar () phase, similar to a recent report on C14PhBA. The two main driving forces in the formation of these two supra-molecular columnar structures were identified: One was the H-bond formation between N-H and C[double bond, length as m-dash]O groups, and the other was the micro-phase separation between the bisamide cores and the alkyl chains. With increasing the length of alkyl tails, the isotropization temperature decreased, while the disordering temperature of the alkyl tails increased. The 2D lattice structures perpendicular to the columnar axis also increasingly deviated from the pseudo-hexagonal packing with increasing the alkyl tail length. However, the alkyl tail length did not have a significant influence on the packing along the columnar axis direction. Utilizing polarized optical microscopy, the phase identifications were also supported by the observation of texture changes and molecular arrangements inside of the micro-sized domains.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007
Prachur Bhargava; Yingfeng Tu; Joseph X. Zheng; Huiming Xiong; Roderic P. Quirk; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Yiwen Li; Wen-Bin Zhang; I-Fan Hsieh; Guoliang Zhang; Yan Cao; Xiaopeng Li; Chrys Wesdemiotis; Bernard Lotz; Huiming Xiong; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
Macromolecules | 2006
Joseph X. Zheng; Huiming Xiong; William Y. Chen; Kyung Min Lee; Ryan M. Van Horn; Roderic P. Quirk; Bernard Lotz; Edwin L. Thomas; ⊥ and An-Chang Shi; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
Physical Review Letters | 2004
William Y. Chen; Joseph X. Zheng; Stephen Z. D. Cheng; Christopher Y. Li; Ping Huang; Lei Zhu; Huiming Xiong; Qing Ge; Ya Guo; Rodric P. Quirk; Bernard Lotz; Lingfeng Deng; Chi Wu; Edwin L. Thomas
Advanced Materials | 2002
Shi Jin; Shuxin Cong; Gi Xue; Huiming Xiong; Bart Mansdorf; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
Chemistry of Materials | 2005
Kwang Un Jeong; Shi Jin; Jason J. Ge; Brian S. Knapp; Matthew J. Graham; Jrjeng Ruan; Mingming Guo; Huiming Xiong; Frank W. Harris; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
Macromolecules | 2013
Nan Lou; Yangyang Wang; Xiaopeng Li; Haixia Li; Ping Wang; Chrys Wesdemiotis; Alexei P. Sokolov; Huiming Xiong
Polymer | 2007
Huiming Xiong; Joseph X. Zheng; Ryan M. Van Horn; Kwang-Un Jeong; Roderic P. Quirk; Bernard Lotz; Edwin L. Thomas; William J. Brittain; Stephen Z. D. Cheng
Macromolecules | 2005
Kwang-Un Jeong; Brian S. Knapp; Jason J. Ge; Shi Jin; Matthew J. Graham; Huiming Xiong; Frank W. Harris; Stephen Z. D. Cheng