Compressible Liquids Part 2

DOI

Liquids are commonly known to be incompressible. However, a recently invented class of materials called Porous Liquids, which exhibit permanent porosity in the liquid phase, are likely to be compressible. These porous liquids, when under pressure (50-1200 Bar), appear to reduce in volume as the bulk liquid will forcibly occupy the cavities thereby reducing the total volume of the liquid. As the synthesised porous liquids can have up to ten percent free space, there is the potential for these porous liquids to undergo much greater reduction in volume than for conventional liquids (seemingly a 11% reduction) when pressure (300 Bar) is applied. In part one of the experiments we obtained very promising data of the first known compressible liquid. Part two will consist of reanalysing the system to better understand the parameters of this compressible liquid.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5286/ISIS.E.RB1900138-1
Metadata Access https://icatisis.esc.rl.ac.uk/oaipmh/request?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_datacite&identifier=oai:icatisis.esc.rl.ac.uk:inv/101756101
Provenance
Creator Dr Tristan Youngs; Professor Stuart James; Dr Deborah Crawford; Mr John Cahir
Publisher ISIS Neutron and Muon Source
Publication Year 2022
Rights CC-BY Attribution 4.0 International; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
OpenAccess true
Contact isisdata(at)stfc.ac.uk
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Discipline Chemistry; Natural Sciences
Temporal Coverage Begin 2019-03-06T09:00:00Z
Temporal Coverage End 2019-03-09T09:05:47Z