Water and Ice in Graphene Nanovessels

ORAL

Abstract

Studying water behavior in nano-enclosures is of particular interest but requires fine spectroscopic probes with sub-micrometer resolution. Graphene liquid cells (GLCs) which feature two closely-spaced sheets of graphene wrapped around hydrated samples, facilitate high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) measurements of water and ice encased tightly in hydrophobic graphene nanovessels. We perform TEM and EELS measurements in GLCs maintained at either 25oC or -165oC to examine the nanoscale arrangement of water and ice molecules with sub-eV energy resolution. Simultaneous quantification of water and ice thickness leads to the conclusion that H-bonding strengthens under increased confinement. The present results offer new insight on water molecule arrangement under high-confinement conditions.

*This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 1805753. Efforts by T. Shokuhfar was supported by NSF CAREER award No. 1564950. The work made use of instruments in the Electron Microscopy Service (Research Resources Center, UIC).

Presenters

  • Seyed Mohammadreza Ghodsi

    • University of Illinois at Chicago

Authors

  • Seyed Mohammadreza Ghodsi

    • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Sushant Anand

    • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Reza Shahbazian Yassar

    • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Tolou Shokuhfar

    • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Constantine M Megaridis

    • Univ of Illinois - Chicago
    • University of Illinois at Chicago