Electric Field Induced Associations in the Double Layer of Salt-in-Ionic-Liquid Electrolytes
Ionic liquids (ILs) are an extremely exciting class of electrolytes for energy storage applications because of their unique combination of properties. Upon dissolving alkali metal salts, such as Li or Na based salts, with the same anion as the IL, an intrinsically asymmetric electrolyte can be creat...
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Zusammenfassung: | Ionic liquids (ILs) are an extremely exciting class of electrolytes for
energy storage applications because of their unique combination of properties.
Upon dissolving alkali metal salts, such as Li or Na based salts, with the same
anion as the IL, an intrinsically asymmetric electrolyte can be created for use
in batteries, known as a salt-in-ionic liquid (SiIL). These SiILs have been
well studied in the bulk, where negative transference numbers of the alkali
metal cation have been observed from the formation of small, negatively charged
clusters. The properties of these SiILs at electrified interfaces, however,
have received little to no attention. Here, we develop a theory for the
electrical double layer (EDL) of SiILs where we consistently account for the
thermoreversible association of ions into Cayley tree aggregates. The theory
predicts that the IL cations first populate the EDL at negative voltages, as
they are not strongly bound to the anions. However at large negative voltages
which are strong enough to break the alkali metal cation-anion associations,
these IL cations are exchanged for the alkali metal cation because of their
higher charge density. At positive voltages, we find that the SiIL actually
becomes $\textit{more aggregated while screening the electrode charge}$ from
the formation of large, negatively charged aggregates. Therefore, in contrast
to conventional intuition of associations in the EDL, SiILs appear to become
more associated in certain electric fields. We present these theoretical
predictions to be verified by molecular dynamics simulations and experimental
measurements. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2402.04039 |