| Literature DB >> 31406367 |
Xianwen Mao1,2, Paul Brown3, Ctirad Červinka4,5, Gavin Hazell6, Hua Li7,8, Yinying Ren3, Di Chen9, Rob Atkin8, Julian Eastoe10, Isabelle Grillo11, Agilio A H Padua3,4, Margarida F Costa Gomes12,13, T Alan Hatton14.
Abstract
Driven by the potential applications of ionic liquids (ILs) in many emerging electrochemical technologies, recent research efforts have been directed at understanding the complex ion ordering in these systems, to uncover novel energy storage mechanisms at IL-electrode interfaces. Here, we discover that surface-active ILs (SAILs), which contain amphiphilic structures inducing self-assembly, exhibit enhanced charge storage performance at electrified surfaces. Unlike conventional non-amphiphilic ILs, for which ion distribution is dominated by Coulombic interactions, SAILs exhibit significant and competing van der Waals interactions owing to the non-polar surfactant tails, leading to unusual interfacial ion distributions. We reveal that, at an intermediate degree of electrode polarization, SAILs display optimum performance, because the low-charge-density alkyl tails are effectively excluded from the electrode surfaces, whereas the formation of non-polar domains along the surface suppresses undesired overscreening effects. This work represents a crucial step towards understanding the unique interfacial behaviour and electrochemical properties of amphiphilic liquid systems showing long-range ordering, and offers insights into the design principles for high-energy-density electrolytes based on spontaneous self-assembly behaviour.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31406367 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0449-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 47.656