Breakthrough Conductivity Enhancement in Deep Eutectic Solvents via Grotthuss‐Type Proton Transport

Author:

Prado Desiree Mae1ORCID,Robledo Alan2ORCID,Hightower Katherine2ORCID,Jahng Anthony1ORCID,Doherty Brian2ORCID,Poling Kayla1ORCID,Tuckerman Mark23456ORCID,Burda Clemens1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry Case Western Reserve University Cleveland OH 44106 USA

2. Department of Chemistry New York University New York NY 10003 USA

3. Department of Physics New York University 726 Broadway New York NY 10003 USA

4. Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences New York University New York NY 10012 USA

5. Simons Center for Computational Physical Chemistry New York University New York NY 10003 USA

6. NYU‐ECNU Center for Computational Chemistry NYU Shanghai 3663 Zhongshan Road North Shanghai 200062 China

Abstract

AbstractThere is an increasing demand for the development of ion‐conducting electrolytes for energy storage systems. Much attention is directed toward deep eutectic solvents as potential candidates. In the search for highly conductive systems, the possibility of designing deep eutectic solvents with Grotthuss‐type proton transport is widely overlooked. Herein, ethaline, a mixture of choline chloride and ethylene glycol is used in a 1:2 molar ratio, to induce a significant conductivity increase with the addition of water and sulfuric acid (H2SO4). The achieved breakthrough conductivity is analyzed experimentally and simulated with ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD). At sufficient water content, an H‐bonding network is formed that leads to a significant breakthrough conductivity based on H2SO4‐derived proton transfer following the long‐established Grotthuss proton transport mechanism. This result is substantiated by the positive deviation from the ideal KCl line in the Walden plot. Specifically, the data series positioned above the reference line indicates a Grotthuss mechanism in action. The AIMD simulations demonstrate proton transfer between water and ethylene glycol, supported by simulation frames captured at various times.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Office of Science

Basic Energy Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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