Issue 38, 2023

A volume-based description of transport in incompressible liquid electrolytes and its application to ionic liquids

Abstract

Transference numbers play an important role in understanding the dynamics of electrolytes and assessing their performance in batteries. Unfortunately, these transport parameters are difficult to measure in highly concentrated liquid electrolytes such as ionic liquids. Also, the interpretation of their sign and magnitude has provoked an ongoing debate in the literature further complicated by the use of different languages. In this work, we highlight the role of the reference frame for the interpretation of transport parameters using our novel thermodynamically consistent theory for highly correlated electrolytes. We argue that local volume conservation is a key principle in incompressible liquid electrolytes and use the volume-based drift velocity as a reference. We apply our general framework to electrophoretic NMR experiments. For ionic liquid based electrolytes, we find that the results of the eNMR measurements can be best described using this volume-based description. This highlights the limitations of the widely used center-of-mass reference frame which for example forms the basis for molecular dynamics simulations – a standard tool for the theoretical calculation of transport parameters. It shows that the assumption of local momentum conservation is incorrect in those systems on the macroscopic scale.

Graphical abstract: A volume-based description of transport in incompressible liquid electrolytes and its application to ionic liquids

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Sep 2022
Accepted
12 Jul 2023
First published
27 Jul 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023,25, 25965-25978

A volume-based description of transport in incompressible liquid electrolytes and its application to ionic liquids

F. Kilchert, M. Lorenz, M. Schammer, P. Nürnberg, M. Schönhoff, A. Latz and B. Horstmann, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 25965 DOI: 10.1039/D2CP04423D

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