Glycerol Hydrogen-Bonding Network Dominates Structure and Collective Dynamics in a Deep Eutectic Solvent.
Antonio FaraoneDurgesh V WagleGary A BakerE C NovakM OhlD ReuterPeter LunkenheimerA LoidlEugene MamontovPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2018)
The deep eutectic solvent glyceline formed by choline chloride and glycerol in 1:2 molar ratio is much less viscous compared to glycerol, which facilitates its use in many applications where high viscosity is undesirable. Despite the large difference in viscosity, we have found that the structural network of glyceline is completely defined by its glycerol constituent, which exhibits complex microscopic dynamic behavior, as expected from a highly correlated hydrogen-bonding network. Choline ions occupy interstitial voids in the glycerol network and show little structural or dynamic correlations with glycerol molecules. Despite the known higher long-range diffusivity of the smaller glycerol species in glyceline, in applications where localized dynamics is essential (e.g., in microporous media), the local transport and dynamic properties must be dominated by the relatively loosely bound choline ions.