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Influence of surface nanostructure-induced innermost ion structuring on capacitance of carbon/ionic liquid double layers.

Yi-Jung TuSheng-Ting Peng
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
Ionic liquids have drawn great interest as electrolytes for energy storage applications in which they form characteristic electrical double layers at electrode interfaces. For ionic liquids at carbon electrode interfaces, their double layers are subject to nanoscale structuring of the electrode surface, involving altered ion structure and interactions that significantly influence the double layer capacitance. In this regard, we investigate the modulation of ionic liquid double layers by electrode surface roughness and the resulting effects on the ion structure, interaction, and capacitance. We performed fixed voltage molecular dynamics simulations to compute the differential capacitance profiles for the ionic liquids [BMIm + ][TFSI - ] and [BMIm + ][FSI - ] at model carbon electrode interfaces with the surface channel width at subnanometer and nanometer scales. We find that both [BMIm + ][TFSI - ] and [BMIm + ][FSI - ] exhibit enhanced differential capacitance for the electrode surface with a subnanometer channel width relative to the flat graphene surface, but the most pronounced enhancements for these two ionic liquids unexpectedly appear at different applied potential regimes. For [BMIm + ][TFSI - ], the nanostructured electrode shows significant enhancement of capacitance at high positive potential. For [BMIm + ][FSI - ], on the other hand, this enhancement is small at positive polarization but noticeable at low negative potential. We demonstrate that differences in these capacitance trends is due to differences in ion correlation that arise from a steric constraint of nanostructured electrode surface on the voltage-mediated restructuring of ions closest to the electrode interface. For example, the TFSI - and FSI - anions tend to structure with their charged and nonpolar groups in contact with the positive electrode surface when the constraint on these close-contact anions is relaxed. This anion structuring largely retains the cation association near the nanostructured electrode, resulting in only a slight increase in capacitance at positive polarization. Our simulations highlight the sensitive dependence of the innermost ion structure on the electrode surface nanostructure and applied voltage and the resulting influence on ion correlation and capacitance of ionic liquid double layers.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • carbon nanotubes
  • room temperature
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • solid state
  • oxidative stress
  • high resolution
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • molecular docking
  • drug induced