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Microscopic-Level Insights into Solvation Chemistry for Nonsolvating Diluents Enabling High-Voltage/Rate Aqueous Supercapacitors.

Jinhe YuJieshan QiuXue-Dan SongQing ZhangZhao WangYuanyang XieYingbin LiuWenbin LiYiwang DingJieshan Qiu
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Localized "water-in-salt" (LWIS) electrolytes are promising candidates for the next generation of high-voltage aqueous electrolytes with low viscosity/salt beyond high-salt electrolytes. An effective yet high-function diluent mainly determines the properties of LWIS electrolytes, being a key issue. Herein, the donor number of solvents is identified to serve as a descriptor of interaction intensity between solvents and salts to screen the organic diluents having few impacts on the solvation microenvironment and intrinsic properties of the original high-salt electrolyte, further leading to the construction of a novel low-viscosity electrolyte with a low dosage of the LiNO 3 salt and well-kept intrinsic Li + -NO 3 - -H 2 O clusters. Nonsolvating diluents, especially acetonitrile (AN) that has never been reported previously, are presented with the capability of constructing a LWIS electrolyte with nonflammability, electrode-philic features, lower viscosity, decreased salt dosage, and a greatly enhanced ion diffusion coefficient by about 280 times. This strongly relies on a huge difference of about 5000 times in coordination and solubility between AN and H 2 O toward LiNO 3 (0.05 vs 25 mol kg solvent -1 ) and the moderate interaction between AN and H 2 O. Multi-spectroscopic techniques and molecular dynamics simulations uncover the solvation chemistry at the microscopic level and the interplay among cations, anions, and H 2 O without/with AN. The identified unique diluting and nonsolvating effects of AN reveal well-maintained cation-anion-H 2 O clusters and enhanced intermolecular hydrogen bonding between AN and H 2 O, further reinforcing the H 2 O stability and expanding the voltage window up to 3.28 V. This is a breakthrough that is far beyond high-viscosity/salt electrolytes for high-voltage and high-rate aqueous supercapacitors.
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