Exploring Electrochemical Windows of Room-Temperature Ionic Liquids: A Computational Study

Room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) are regarded as green solvents due to their low volatility, low flammability, and thermal stability. RTILs exhibit wide electrochemical windows, making them prime candidates as media for electrochemically driven reactions such as electro-catalysis and electro-p...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2012-10, Vol.116 (39), p.11943-11952
Hauptverfasser: Tian, Yong-Hui, Goff, George S, Runde, Wolfgang H, Batista, Enrique R
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container_end_page 11952
container_issue 39
container_start_page 11943
container_title The journal of physical chemistry. B
container_volume 116
creator Tian, Yong-Hui
Goff, George S
Runde, Wolfgang H
Batista, Enrique R
description Room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) are regarded as green solvents due to their low volatility, low flammability, and thermal stability. RTILs exhibit wide electrochemical windows, making them prime candidates as media for electrochemically driven reactions such as electro-catalysis and electro-plating for separations applications. Therefore, understanding the factors determining edges of the electrochemical window, the electrochemical stability of the RTILs, and the degradation products is crucial to improve the efficiency and applicability of these systems. We present here computational investigations of the electrochemical properties of a variety of RTILs covering a wide range of electrochemical windows. We proposed four different approaches with different degrees of approximation and computational cost from gas-phase calculations to full explicit solvation models. It was found that, whereas the simplest model has significant flaws in accuracy, implicit and explicit solvent models can be used to reliably predict experimental data. The general trend of electrochemical windows of the RTILs studied is well reproduced, showing that it increases in the order of imidazolium < ammonium < pyrrolidinium < phosphonium giving confidence to the methodology presented to use it in screening studies of ionic liquids.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/jp303915c
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subjects Computation
Computational efficiency
Computing time
Degradation
Ionic liquids
Mathematical models
Solvation
Solvents
title Exploring Electrochemical Windows of Room-Temperature Ionic Liquids: A Computational Study
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