Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Johannes Hunger is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Johannes Hunger.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Dynamics of Imidazolium Ionic Liquids from a Combined Dielectric Relaxation and Optical Kerr Effect Study: Evidence for Mesoscopic Aggregation

David A. Turton; Johannes Hunger; Alexander Stoppa; G.T. Hefter; Andreas Thoman; Markus Walther; Richard Buchner; Klaas Wynne

We have measured the intermolecular dynamics of the 1,3-dialkylimidazolium-based room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) [emim][BF(4)], [emim][DCA], and [bmim][DCA] at 25 degrees C from below 1 GHz to 10 THz by ultrafast optical Kerr effect (OKE) spectroscopy and dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS) augmented by time-domain terahertz and far-infrared FTIR spectroscopy. This concerted approach allows a more detailed analysis to be made of the relatively featureless terahertz region, where the higher frequency diffusional modes are strongly overlapped with librations and intermolecular vibrations. Of greatest interest though, is an intense low frequency (sub-alpha) relaxation that we show is in accordance with recent simulations that have reported mesoscopic structure arising from aggregates or clusters--structure that explains the anomalous and inconveniently high viscosities of these liquids.


ChemPhysChem | 2009

Temperature Dependence of the Dielectric Properties and Dynamics of Ionic Liquids

Johannes Hunger; Alexander Stoppa; Simon Schrödle; G.T. Hefter; Richard Buchner

Dielectric spectra were measured for eight, mostly imidazolium-based, room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) over a wide range of frequencies (0.2 < or = nu/GHz < or = 89) and temperatures (5 < or = theta/degrees C < or = 65). Detailed analysis of the spectra shows that the dominant low frequency process centred at ca. 0.06 to 10 GHz (depending on the salt and the temperature) is better described using a symmetrically broadened Cole-Cole model rather than the asymmetric Cole-Davidson models used previously. Evaluation of the temperature dependence of the static permittivities, effective dipole moments, volumes of rotation, activation energies, and relaxation times derived from the dielectric data indicates that the low frequency process cannot be solely due to rotational diffusion of the dipolar imidazolium cations, as has been thought, but must also include other contributions, probably from cooperative motions. Analysis of the Debye process observed at higher frequencies for these RTILs is not undertaken because it overlaps with even faster processes that lie outside the range of the present instrumentation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Interactions and Dynamics in Ionic Liquids

Alexander Stoppa; Johannes Hunger; Richard Buchner; G.T. Hefter; Andreas Thoman; Hanspeter Helm

Precise dielectric spectra have been determined at 25 degrees C over the exceptionally broad frequency range of 0.1 <or= nu/GHz <or= 3000 for the imidazolium-based room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) [bmim][BF4], [bmim][PF6], [bmim][DCA], and [hmim][BF4]. The spectra are dominated by a low-frequency process at approximately 1 GHz with a broad relaxation time distribution of the Cole-Davidson or Cole-Cole type, which is thought to correspond to the rotational diffusion of the dipolar cations. In addition, these RTILs possess two Debye relaxations at approximately 5 GHz and approximately 0.6 THz and a damped harmonic oscillation at approximately 2.5 THz. The two higher-frequency modes are almost certainly due to cation librations, but the origin of the approximately 5 GHz mode remains obscure.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Why are ionic liquid ions mainly associated in water? A Car-Parrinello study of 1-ethyl-3-methyl-imidazolium chloride water mixture.

Christian Spickermann; Jens Thar; Sebastian B. C. Lehmann; Stefan Zahn; Johannes Hunger; Richard Buchner; Patricia A. Hunt; Tom Welton; Barbara Kirchner

In this study we present the results of a first principles molecular dynamics simulation of a single 1-ethyl-3-methyl-imidazolium chloride [C(2)C(1)im][Cl] ion pair dissolved in 60 water molecules. We observe a preference of the in plane chloride coordination with respect to the cation ring plane as compared to the energetic slightly more demanding on top coordination. Evaluation of the different radial distribution functions demonstrates that the structure of the hydration shell around the ion pair differs significantly from bulk water and that no true ion pair dissociation in terms of completely autonomous solvation shells takes place on the timescale of the simulation. In addition, dipole moment distributions of the solvent in distinct solvation shells around different functional parts of the [C(2)C(1)im][Cl] ion pair are calculated from maximally localized Wannier functions. The analysis of these distributions gives evidence for a depolarization of water molecules close to the hydrophobic parts of the cation as well as close to the anion. Examination of the angular distribution of different OH(H(2)O)-X angles in turn shows a linear coordination of chloride accompanied by a tangential orientation of water molecules around the hydrophobic groups, being a typical feature of hydrophobic hydration. Based on these orientational aspects, a structural model for the obvious preference of ion pair association is developed, which justifies the associating behavior of solvated [C(2)C(1)im][Cl] ions in terms of an energetically favorable interface between the solvation shells of the anion and the hydrophobic parts of the cation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Influence of Concentration and Temperature on the Dynamics of Water in the Hydrophobic Hydration Shell of Tetramethylurea

Klaas-Jan Tielrooij; Johannes Hunger; Richard Buchner; Mischa Bonn; Huib J. Bakker

We study the influence of the amphipilic compound tetramethylurea (TMU) on the dynamical properties of water, using dielectric relaxation spectroscopy in the regime between 0.2 GHz and 2 THz. This technique is capable of resolving different water species, their relative fractions, and their corresponding reorientation dynamics. We find that the reorientation dynamics of water molecules in the hydration shell of the hydrophobic groups of TMU is between 3 (at low concentrations) and 10 (at higher concentrations) times slower than the dynamics of bulk water. The data indicate that the effect of hydrophobic groups on water is strong but relatively short-ranged. With increasing temperature, the fraction of water contained in the hydrophobic hydration shell decreases, which implies that the overall effect of hydrophobic groups on water becomes smaller.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Complex Formation in Aqueous Trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) Solutions

Johannes Hunger; Klaas-Jan Tielrooij; Richard Buchner; Mischa Bonn; Huib J. Bakker

We study aqueous solutions of the amphiphilic osmolyte trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) using broadband dielectric spectroscopy and femtosecond mid-infrared spectroscopy. Both experiments provide strong evidence for distinctively slower rotation dynamics for water molecules interacting with the hydrophobic part of the TMAO molecules. Further, water is found to interact more strongly at the hydrophilic site of the TMAO molecules: we find evidence for the formation of stable, TMAO·2H2O and/or TMAO·3H2O complexes. While this coordination structure seems obvious, the lifetime of these complexes is found to be extraordinarily long (>50 ps). The existence of these long-lived complexes leads to pronounced parallel dipole correlations between water and TMAO, reflected in enhanced amplitudes in the dielectric spectra. The strong interaction between water and TMAO also results in a red-shifted band for the O-D stretching vibration of HDO molecules in an isotopically diluted aqueous TMAO solution. This O-D stretching vibration has a vibrational lifetime of 670 fs, which is significantly shorter than the lifetime of the O-D stretch vibration of bulk-like HDO molecules, presumably due to efficient coupling to vibrational modes of TMAO. The rotational dynamics of these O-D groups are slowed down dramatically, and are limited by the rotation of the whole complex, while the O-D vector oriented away from TMAO probably shows an accelerated reorientation.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Electrical conductivity and translational diffusion in the 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate ionic liquid

Joshua Sangoro; Ciprian Iacob; Anatoli Serghei; Sergej Naumov; Petrik Galvosas; Jörg Kärger; Christian Wespe; Frank Bordusa; Alexander Stoppa; Johannes Hunger; Richard Buchner; Friedrich Kremer

Broadband dielectric and terahertz spectroscopy (10(-2)-10(+12) Hz) are combined with pulsed field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (PFG-NMR) to explore charge transport and translational diffusion in the 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate ionic liquid. The dielectric spectra are interpreted as superposition of high-frequency relaxation processes associated with dipolar librations and a conductivity contribution. The latter originates from hopping of charge carriers on a random spatially varying potential landscape and quantitatively fits the observed frequency and temperature dependence of the spectra. A further analysis delivers the hopping rate and enables one to deduce--using the Einstein-Smoluchowski equation--the translational diffusion coefficient of the charge carriers in quantitative agreement with PFG-NMR measurements. By that, the mobility is determined and separated from the charge carrier density; for the former, a Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann and for the latter, an Arrhenius temperature dependence is obtained. There is no indication of a mode arising from the reorientation of stable ion pairs.


Science | 2014

Liquid flow along a solid surface reversibly alters interfacial chemistry

Dan Lis; Ellen H. G. Backus; Johannes Hunger; Sapun H. Parekh; Mischa Bonn

Monitoring water interfaces in motion Water behaves differently at interfaces—where it meets the air, or a solid surface—than it does in the middle of the liquid. Past laboratory studies of this phenomenon have mainly focused on still samples, despite the fact that in natural settings such as rivers and rain, the water moves along the surfaces. Lis et al. used a microfluidics apparatus and a spectroscopy technique called sum frequency generation to study the effects of flow on aqueous chemistry at silica and fluorite surfaces (see the Perspective by Waychunas). The flow of fresh water along the surfaces disrupts the equilibrium of dissolved ions, substantially changing the surface charge and the molecular orientation of the water at the interface. Science, this issue p. 1138; see also p. 1094 A combination of microfluidics and surface-specific spectroscopy enables the study of flow effects at aqueous interfaces. [Also see Perspective by Waychunas] In nature, aqueous solutions often move collectively along solid surfaces (for example, raindrops falling on the ground and rivers flowing through riverbeds). However, the influence of such motion on water-surface interfacial chemistry is unclear. In this work, we combine surface-specific sum frequency generation spectroscopy and microfluidics to show that at immersed calcium fluoride and fused silica surfaces, flow leads to a reversible modification of the surface charge and subsequent realignment of the interfacial water molecules. Obtaining equivalent effects under static conditions requires a substantial change in bulk solution pH (up to 2 pH units), demonstrating the coupling between flow and chemistry. These marked flow-induced variations in interfacial chemistry should substantially affect our understanding and modeling of chemical processes at immersed surfaces.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

From ionic liquid to electrolyte solution: dynamics of 1-N-butyl-3-N-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate/dichloromethane mixtures.

Johannes Hunger; Alexander Stoppa; Richard Buchner; G.T. Hefter

Dielectric spectra have been measured at 25 degrees C for mixtures of the room temperature ionic liquid 1- N-butyl-3- N-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (IL) with dichloromethane (DCM) over the entire composition range at frequencies 0.2 less than or approximately nu/GHz < or = 89. The spectra could be satisfactorily fitted by assuming only two relaxation modes: a Cole-Cole process at lower frequencies and a Debye process at higher frequencies. However, detailed analysis indicated that both spectral features contain additional modes, which could not be resolved due to overlaps. The spectra indicate that the IL appears to retain its chemical character to extraordinarily high levels of dilution ( x IL greater than or approximately 0.5) in DCM. At even higher dilutions ( x IL less than or approximately 0.3), the IL behaves as a conventional but strongly associated electrolyte.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

On the collective network of ionic liquid/water mixtures. II. Decomposition and interpretation of dielectric spectra

Christian Schröder; Johannes Hunger; Alexander Stoppa; Richard Buchner; Othmar Steinhauser

This study deals with the dielectric spectra of mixtures of the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methyl-imidazolium (BMIM(+)) tetrafluoroborate with water at three selected mole fractions 0.767<or=x(H(2)O)<or=0.967. The focus lies on the comparison of experimental and computational data. On the one hand, a computational analysis permits a complete decomposition of spectra, both with respect to dynamical behavior (translation and rotation) as well as to composition of the mixture (cation, anion, and water). Thereby, not only the peak assignment in experimental spectra is enabled but one can also learn more about solvation properties. Of particular importance is the interplay of the dielectric constant and the conductivity representing a measure of collective rotational and translational motion. On the other hand, the comparison with experimental spectra is essential for the validation of the force fields used in simulation. The satisfying agreement between corresponding peaks in the dielectric spectra confirms not only computed dielectric relaxation times but also other collective dynamical properties such as the viscosity. Nevertheless, the detailed fine structure of the conductivity regime reveals specific ion-pair effects not covered by the simulation. A possible confinement of dynamical heterogeneity as a consequence of a system size effect is also indicated.

Collaboration


Dive into the Johannes Hunger's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David A. Turton

University of Strathclyde

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge