Evolution and Reversible Polarity of Multilayering at the Ionic Liquid/Water Interface

Highly correlated positioning of ions underlies Coulomb interactions between ions and electrified interfaces within dense ionic fluids such as biological cells and ionic liquids. Recent work has shown that highly correlated ionic systems behave differently than dilute electrolyte solutions, and inte...

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Veröffentlicht in:J. Phys. Chem. B 2020-07, Vol.124 (29), p.6412-6419
Hauptverfasser: Katakura, Seiji, Amano, Ken-ichi, Sakka, Tetsuo, Bu, Wei, Lin, Binhua, Schlossman, Mark L, Nishi, Naoya
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container_end_page 6419
container_issue 29
container_start_page 6412
container_title J. Phys. Chem. B
container_volume 124
creator Katakura, Seiji
Amano, Ken-ichi
Sakka, Tetsuo
Bu, Wei
Lin, Binhua
Schlossman, Mark L
Nishi, Naoya
description Highly correlated positioning of ions underlies Coulomb interactions between ions and electrified interfaces within dense ionic fluids such as biological cells and ionic liquids. Recent work has shown that highly correlated ionic systems behave differently than dilute electrolyte solutions, and interest is focused upon characterizing the electrical and structural properties of the dense electrical double layers (EDLs) formed at internal interfaces. It has been a challenge for experiments to characterize the progressive development of the EDL on the nanoscale as the interfacial electric potential is varied over a range of positive and negative values. Here we address this challenge by measuring X-ray reflectivity from the interface between an ionic liquid (IL) and a dilute aqueous electrolyte solution over a range of interfacial potentials from −450 to 350 mV. The growth of alternately charged cation-rich and anion-rich layers was observed along with a polarity reversal of the layers as the potential changed sign. These data show that the structural development of an ionic multilayer-like EDL with increasing potential is similar to that suggested by phenomenological theories and MD simulations, although our data also reveal that the excess charge beyond the first ionic layer decays more rapidly than predicted.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c03711
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title Evolution and Reversible Polarity of Multilayering at the Ionic Liquid/Water Interface
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