Login / Signup

Partial breaking of the Coulombic ordering of ionic liquids confined in carbon nanopores.

Ryusuke FutamuraTaku IiyamaYuma TakasakiYury GogotsiMark J BiggsMathieu SalanneJulie SégaliniPatrice SimonKatsumi Kaneko
Published in: Nature materials (2017)
Ionic liquids are composed of equal quantities of positive and negative ions. In the bulk, electrical neutrality occurs in these liquids due to Coulombic ordering, in which ion shells of alternating charge form around a central ion. Their structure under confinement is far less well understood. This hinders the widespread application of ionic liquids in technological applications. Here we use scattering experiments to resolve the structure of a widely used ionic liquid (EMI-TFSI) when it is confined inside nanoporous carbons. We show that Coulombic ordering reduces when the pores can accommodate only a single layer of ions. Instead, equally charged ion pairs are formed due to the induction of an electric potential of opposite sign in the carbon pore walls. This non-Coulombic ordering is further enhanced in the presence of an applied external electric potential. This finding opens the door for the design of better materials for electrochemical applications.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • room temperature
  • quantum dots
  • human health
  • single molecule
  • aqueous solution
  • gold nanoparticles
  • climate change
  • mass spectrometry
  • molecularly imprinted