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Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute of Technology Brian D. Storey Olin College

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Page 1: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids

Martin Z. BazantDepartments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Brian D. StoreyOlin College

Page 2: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Ionic liquids• Molten salts (T~1000oC)• Room temperature IL

• Supercapacitors• Batteries• Actuators

– Large ions (~1 nm) – No solvent. What is permittivity?– Ion-ion correlations (+-+-+-+-)– Ion size = 10 x Debye length– Capacitance data often interpreted through

classic electrolyte model.

BMIMwikipedia

Page 3: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

ln ezckT iii

At equilibrium:

Chemical potential of dilute point ions:

0 1 2 3 4 50

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

X

C

0 1 2 3 4 510

-20

10-10

100

1010

1020

X

C

Applied voltage =.025 V Applied voltage =0.75 V

,kT

ez

ii

i

ecc

Would need ions to be 0.01 angstrom

Classical double layer theory

Page 4: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Finite sized ionsStern (1924) Bikerman (1942)

Bazant, Kilic, Storey, Ajdari – ACIS 2009

)1ln(ln kTezckT iii

Volume fraction

Page 5: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

All mean-field theories

1. Electrochemistry

2. Electrostatics

3. Flow

• Same “mean electric field” in all equations

Page 6: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

“Ginzburg-Landau” theory for ionic liquids

Page 7: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

“In physics, Ginzburg–Landau theory, named after Vitaly Lazarevich Ginzburg and Lev Landau, is a mathematical theory used to model superconductivity. It does not purport to explain the microscopic mechanisms giving rise to superconductivity. Instead, it examines the macroscopic properties of a superconductor with the aid of general thermodynamic arguments.” --- wikipedia

“Ginzburg-Landau” theory for ionic liquids

Page 8: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

chemical free energy

mean electrostatic energy

self energy of E field

electrostatic correlations (new)Require

4th order modified Poisson-Boltzmann eqn

“Ginzburg-Landau” theory for ionic liquids

Page 9: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Is this crazy? Maybe not…

Wavelength-dependent permittivity (Tosi 1986, molten salts)

“Intermediate coupling” in one-component plasma(Santangelo 2006; Hatlo, Lue 2010 --- statistical mechanics of point-like counterions near a wall)

Nonlocal dielectric response (Kornyshev et al 1978, Hildebrandt et al 2004)

Nonlocal ion-ion correlations (this work)

�̂�=𝜀(1+ℓ𝑐2 𝑘2)

�̂�=𝜀(1−ℓ𝑐2 𝛻2)

Page 10: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

RTIL double-layer structure

charge density at V=1,10,100 kT/e

Set to ion size,

Page 11: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

This model vs. MD simulations Fedorov, Kornyshev 2009

Solid: this model, Open: MD

Page 12: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

RTIL differential capacitance

This model

MD Simulations(Fedorov & Kornyshev, 2008)

No correlations, but includes size effects(Fedorov & Kornyshev, 2008)

µ

Page 13: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

0 1 2 3 4 50

1

2

3

4

5

x/a

g(x)

Correlated electrolytes high valence, high concentration

1M 2:1 salt

Boda et al 2002 MC simulations

-

Page 14: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

10-3

10-2

10-1

100

-1

-0.8

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0

C+ (Molar)

Q (

C/m

2 )

V= -1

V= -2

V= -4

V= -6

V= -8

Comparison to DFT2:1 salt

This model

No corr.

Page 15: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

10-3

10-2

10-1

100

-1

-0.8

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0

C+ (Molar)

Q (

C/m

2 )

V= -1

V= -2

V= -4

V= -6

V= -8

Comparison to DFT2:1 salt

DFT of Gillespie et al, 2011

This model

DFT

No corr.

Page 16: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

-20 -10 0 10 20

-2

-1

0

1

V

U/U

Hs

Slip velocity2:1 salt

C=1M

C=0.1M C=0.01M

Page 17: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Comparison to experiment2:1 salt

10-4

10-2

100

0

20

40

60

80pA

/bar

C (M)

Van der Heyden 2006 nanochannel experiments

Page 18: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Conclusions

• Electrostatic correlations lead to overscreening, which competes with crowding in ionic liquids and concentrated, multivalent electrolytes

• Correlations may explain reduced/reversed electro-osmotic flow at high concentration and enhanced capacitance of nanopores

• A simple continuum model is proposed

Page 19: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute
Page 20: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Capacitance 2:1 salt

-20 -10 0 10 200

5

10

15

V

C/C

DH

C=1M

C=0.1M

C=0.01M

This model

Size effects Included, no corr.

Correlations might explain why mean field theories need large ions to fit exp.

Page 21: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Overscreening vs. crowding

MZ Bazant, BD Storey, AA Kornyshev, Phys. Rev. Lett. (2011)

Page 22: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Boundary conditions

• Electrostatic BC (no correlations)

• Neglect “bulk” correlations (finite size ions)

Page 23: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

Concentration profiles2:1 salt, 1M, a=0.3 nm

0 2 4 60

2

4

6

8

c(x)

/c

V=1

0 2 4 60

20

40

60

80V=5

0 2 4 60

20

40

60

80

c(x)

/c

x/a

V=10

0 2 4 60

20

40

60

80c(

x)/c

x/a

V=20

kT/e kT/e

kT/e kT/e

Page 24: Electrokinetics of correlated electrolytes and ionic liquids Martin Z. Bazant Departments of Chemical Engineering and Mathematics Massachusetts Institute

1

2

3

4

1 2 3 4 5

RTIL double-layer structure