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Underscreening in concentrated electrolytes: re-entrant swelling in polyelectrolyte brushes.

Hayden RobertsonGareth R ElliottAndrew R J NelsonAnton P Le BrunGrant B WebberStuart W PrescottVincent Stuart James CraigErica J WanlessJoshua D Willott
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
Hypersaline environments are ubiquitous in nature and are found in myriad technological processes. Recent empirical studies have revealed a significant discrepancy between predicted and observed screening lengths at high salt concentrations, a phenomenon referred to as underscreening. Herein we investigate underscreening using a cationic polyelectrolyte brush as an exemplar. Poly(2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl)trimethylammonium (PMETAC) brushes were synthesised and their internal structural changes and swelling response was monitored with neutron reflectometry and spectroscopic ellipsometry. Both techniques revealed a monotonic brush collapse as the concentration of symmetric monovalent electrolyte increased. However, a non-monotonic change in brush thickness was observed in all multivalent electrolytes at higher concentrations, known as re-entrant swelling; indicative of underscreening. For all electrolytes, numerical self-consistent field theory predictions align with experimental studies in the low-to-moderate salt concentration regions. Analysis suggests that the classical theory of electrolytes is insufficient to describe the screening lengths observed at high salt concentrations and that the re-entrant polyelectrolyte brush swelling seen herein is consistent with the so-called regular underscreening phenomenon.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • ion batteries
  • solid state
  • single cell
  • molecular docking
  • optical coherence tomography