Open Access Article
Y. K. Catherine
Fung
and
Susan
Perkin
*
Physical & Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. E-mail: susan.perkin@chem.ox.ac.uk
First published on 6th March 2023
The observation of long-range interactions across ionic liquids and highly concentrated electrolytes, extending far beyond the Debye–Hückel prediction and beyond the range predicted in liquid state theory, has been called ‘anomalous underscreening’. A number of theoretical and experimental works have explored this phenomenon over recent years, although its origin is not yet fully understood. Most of the experimental studies of anomalous underscreening until now involved aprotic ionic liquids, and so it is of interest to explore interactions in protic ionic liquids where the distribution of charge in the fluid is different in nature. Here we present direct measurements of the interaction force as a function of separation distance, measured using a surface force balance, across solutions of a protic ionic liquid ethylammonium nitrate (EAN) and its mixtures with water over a range of volume fractions from 10 vol% to 100 vol% EAN. The results reveal intricate details about near-surface ordering and dynamics at the EAN–mica interface as well as anomalous underscreening consistent with that observed in the past with aprotic ionic liquids.
The general form of the measured interaction force, and corresponding free energy, across concentrated electrolytes in these experiments was captured approximately by the following expression:
![]() | (1) |
In dilute electrolyte solutions the same expression, eqn (1), explains experimental interaction forces and is well understood theoretically.9 In that case the van der Waals and electrostatic terms together make up the mean-field DLVO theory10 with λs then matching the Debye–Hückel screening length, λD, where:
![]() | (2) |
the vacuum permittivity, kB is Boltzmann's constant and T the temperature. The second, oscillatory, term matches the (non-mean field) structure of the molecular solvent (e.g. water structure) as can be resolved in the highest resolution measurements in dilute electrolytes.9,11
Why should such an expression also model the observed behaviour in a concentrated electrolyte, so far from the regime where mean-field theories apply? An answer may lie in the exact analysis of the decay of intermolecular correlations in electrolytes by Kjellander.2,12 Taking account of all ion correlations and with proper analysis of the dielectric response, Kjellander showed that the decay of interaction free energy with distance has multiple terms, each either plain exponential or exponentially damped oscillatory. The decay parameter for each term (or ‘mode’) is a solution of the following equation:
![]() | (3) |
is the renormalised charge and
is the renormalised dielectric function (a function of κ, so that eqn (3) is an equation for κ). Thus, interactions are characterised by multiple decay parameters and in general each parameter reflects both charge and density correlations; i.e. there is no single ‘electrostatic decay length’.12 In the limit of infinite dilution, the slowest decaying term is plain exponential, and the decay length collapses onto the Debye–Hückel screening length. At a high concentration of electrolyte, the presence of a slowly decaying plain exponential term must arise from a small value of
. (Note that the dielectric function is approximately the dielectric constant when the decay parameter is small.) This has been interpreted in the past in terms of strongly coupled ion aggregates behaving as quasiparticles,2 and as voids in the ionic network performing the role of charge carrier over length scales characterised by the Bjerrum length.13 However, it remains challenging to calculate values for
and
and so the connection to experiments is yet to be fully clarified.
A particular feature of the experimental measurements in concentrated electrolytes is that the range of electrostatic interactions, characterised by λs in eqn (1), was found to increase with increasing ion-concentration of the electrolyte3 and appeared to follow a scaling relation as follows:14
![]() | (4) |
However, substantial effort to reproduce and interpret the decay of interactions using theory and computer simulations have not yet matched up with the experiments: the increase of screening length with concentration was apparent, but the scaling was very different to experimental values (giving ν ≈ 2) and the decay of correlations was oscillatory rather than plain exponential.16–21 Only one recent analysis of the restricted primitive model electrolyte has shown the longer-ranged monotonically decaying term similar to experimental observations.22 Furthermore, in some recent measurements of forces across concentrated aqueous electrolytes with AFM no long range forces were apparent;15 the full picture remains to be fully revealed. The significance and implications of interactions across electrolytes, for a multitude of applications and for our understanding of electrostatics in the liquid state, motivate us to investigate more deeply the phenomena involved.
Here, we study the interaction forces between mica sheets across ethylammonium nitrate (EAN) and its mixtures with water. In contrast to the majority of electrolytes used in the experiments mentioned above, EAN is a protic ionic liquid. Previous experiments involved aprotic ionic liquids, either pure or mixed with polar solvent, or inorganic salts in water. Mindful of the importance of charge distribution in the fluid, it will be of interest to investigate the similarity or otherwise of interactions across aprotic and protic salts. In protic fluids charge transfer can follow a hopping mechanism, known as the Grotthuss mechanism, which accounts for the high conductivity of acidic aqueous solutions compared to salt solutions at similar charge density. Furthermore, the quantum nature of hydrogen bonds and the distribution of charge in protic fluids is of current interest.23,24
Even though there have been relatively few studies of interactions in protic ionic liquids, in fact the first surface force measurements across an ionic liquid involved EAN and its mixtures with water.25 In those experiments the oscillatory structural forces were evident and the changing features with concentration were carefully analysed. However, the less-fine resolution available at the time of those measurements precluded any measurement of weak longer-ranged forces (beyond the oscillatory structural force) as have subsequently been seen in non-protic ionic liquids. Subsequent studies of EAN on mica surfaces were made by Atkin and Warr,26 where again the alternating repulsive and attractive forces indicated layering at the interface. The observed wavelength of 0.5 nm is comparable to the EAN ion-pair size. Small-angle neutron scattering experiments of EAN at T = 318 K (ref. 27) revealed nanostructure in the bulk fluid, likely arising from aggregation of the non-polar groups and of the charged groups in sponge or smectic phases. The addition of water, creating EAN aqueous mixtures, was found to have dramatic effects on surface forces and particle stability.28 Silica colloids were found to be stable in pure EAN, understood through direct AFM force measurement to be due to the build-up of strong solvation layers at the silica interface. However, addition of water led to weaker solvation and fewer solvation layers, and at 5 wt% EAN in water the interaction force between silica surfaces contained an attractive region which led to instability of silica colloids in the mixture. The bulk structure of the EAN–water mixtures has been studied using X-ray scattering, revealing nanostructure consisting of bicontinuous ionic and aqueous phases with local structure remarkably similar to the pure fluids.29
In the measurements presented here we resolve the interaction forces in EAN and water mixtures at higher resolution and over longer range, and compare the results to literature measurements of non-protic electrolytes. Our measurements confirm that the functional form expressed in eqn (1) is a suitable framework for describing forces across EAN solutions, and we describe and interpret the parameters.
The damped oscillatory term appears to describe structural forces (density correlations), with wavelengths comparable to the ion-pair size, in highly concentrated solutions (>80 vol% EAN). At lower concentrations, oscillations are not resolved. Interestingly, in some cases, we found that the nature of the oscillatory force is dependent on the timescale of compression and measurement, indicating slow dynamical effects in the confined structured fluid. At high concentrations we also observe a longer-range plain exponential ‘tail’ in the force, with exponential decay length consistent with previous measurements in non-protic ionic liquids and simple inorganic salt solutions. The concentration-dependence also mirrors earlier measurements, in that the range of the force increases with increasing EAN salt concentration.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 1 Schematic diagram of the Surface Force Balance (SFB). Collimated white light passes through two cylindrical lenses in crossed-cylinder orientation. Back silvered mica sheets which allow light to reflect and partially transmit are glued onto the lenses as a surface substrate. The transmitted light enters a spectrometer and produces interference patterns of fringes of equal chromatic order (FECO). Surface separation, D, is obtained by analysing the FECO.31 | ||
Our setup affords a very high precision in distance of 0.1 nm; accuracy is about 0.2 nm within a single experiment or about 0.5 nm between separate experiments. Furthermore, our resolution in force is ∼10−7 N, between atomically smooth mica crystals of curvature radius R ≈ 10−2 m, giving resolution in
. (This compares favourably with AFM where resolution in force is ∼10−12 N but the roughness of AFM probes tends to lead to actual asperity curvature of R ≈ 10−8–10−9 m, so
for AFM.)
Equimolar nitric acid and ethylamine were reacted in an ice bath to produce ethylammonium nitrate (EAN). The water was removed with a rotatory evaporator at 40 °C until there was no further visible change of the liquid level. The product was then placed on a Schlenk line over 72 h at 30 °C to remove any excess water. The water content of neat EAN measured with the Karl Fischer titrator (HI934, Hanna Instrument) was below 0.1 wt%. Refractive index measurements using an Abbe 60 refractometer gave a value of 1.45, 1.44, 1.43, 1.42 and 1.35 for 100%, 90 vol%, 80 vol%, 70 vol% and 10 vol% EAN respectively.
| EAN volume fraction | λ s | λ o | ξ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7.6 ± 1.4 | 1.3 ± 0.2 | 0.5 ± 0.2 |
| 0.9 | 7.3 ± 1.5 | 1.1 ± 0.1 | 0.5 ± 0.2 |
| 0.8 | 7.1 ± 1.1 | 1.7 ± 0.2 | 0.6 ± 0.2 |
Beyond D = 5 nm, we observe a non-oscillating force which decays with increasing distance in an apparently exponential form, Fig. 2(b). The mean average decay parameter for this longer-ranged force in 100 vol% EAN is found to be 〈λs〉 = 7.6 ± 1.4 nm (from 3 separate experiments, each with different mica sheets and EAN samples; see ESI†).
![]() | ||
| Fig. 2 Example measurements of the normalised force between mica sheets as a function of separation, D, across 100 vol% EAN. (a) Linear scale forces at D < 10 nm with retraction (gold) shown from each layer. Red dashed line shows the force fitted using eqn (1) and the parameters reported in Table 1. Inset shows the full magnitude of the force. (b) Log–linear representation of normal force displaying long-range decay with average decay length 〈λs〉 = 7.6 ± 1.4 nm. (c) The exponential decay envelope is calculated from the force minima, giving λo = 1.3 ± 0.2 nm. (d) The distance separation between the minima gives the oscillation wavelength of the structural force, here ξ = 0.5 ± 0.2 nm. | ||
The reported long-range decay here, measured at room temperature, is comparable to the decay length of 6.3 nm reported in the AFM measurement by Hjalmarsson and co-workers between mica and silica at 373 K and 393 K.6 The surface charge of silica has been reported to increase at elevated temperature in water,32 perhaps explaining the appearance of this additional interaction between silica and mica surfaces above a threshold temperature in the AFM measurements with EAN.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 3 Example measurements of the normalised force between mica sheets as a function of separation, D, across 90 vol% EAN. (a) Linear scale forces at D < 10 nm with retraction (gold) shown from each layer. Red dashed line shows the force fitted using eqn (1) and the parameters reported in Table 1. Inset shows the full magnitude of the force. (b) Log–linear representation of normal force displaying long-range decay with average decay length 〈λs〉 = 7.3 ± 1.5 nm. (c) The exponential decay envelope is calculated from the force minima, giving λo = 1.1 ± 0.1 nm. (d) The distance separation between the minima gives the oscillation wavelength of the structural force, here ξ = 0.5 ± 0.2 nm. | ||
![]() | ||
| Fig. 4 Example measurements of the normalised force between mica sheets as a function of separation, D, across 80 vol% EAN. (a) Linear scale forces at D < 10 nm with retraction (gold) shown from each layer. Red dashed line shows the force fitted using eqn (1) and the parameters reported in Table 1. Inset shows the full magnitude of the force. (b) Log–linear representation of normal force displaying long-range decay with average decay length 〈λs〉 = 7.1 ± 1.1 nm. (c) The exponential decay envelope is calculated from the force minima, giving λo = 1.7 ± 0.2 nm. (d) The distance separation between the minima gives the oscillation wavelength of the structural force, here ξ = 0.6 ± 0.2 nm. | ||
, where νm is the ion pair volume calculated from the bulk density and molecular mass. With this analysis, we observe that our measured screening lengths, when normalised by the respective Debye lengths, vary with concentration in a systematic way and correspond reasonably closely to previously reported measurements with a range of different (non-protic) concentrated electrolytes. In general, our results contribute evidence in support of the former observations regarding scaling of the screening length; at least for the case of measurements made between mica sheets using the surface force balance. It appears that the protic nature of the EAN solutions studied here does not give rise to any substantial deviation from the former observation.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 7 Experimental decay length normalised by the corresponding Debye length, λs/λD, as a function of the mean ion diameter normalised by the Debye length, a/λD. Data points are show for literature measurements by Smith et al.3 and, in red, the measurements with EAN reported in this work. | ||
For contrast, we begin by showing that the interaction forces across 100 vol% EAN do not appear to vary significantly over time (see Fig. 8). As already outlined above, in neat EAN we observed distinct layers near the mica–EAN–mica interface during surface approach. These layers are well defined during our slow approach (approach rate 0.42 ± 0.09 nm s−1). Fig. 8 shows two force profiles recorded from two different approaches across 100 vol% EAN between mica sheets at different times after injection of EAN between the mica sheets; apart from a small vertical offset which is likely due to different mica charge, the two force profiles are very similar.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 8 Time evolution of the normalised force between mica sheets as a function of separation, D, across 100% EAN. | ||
However, when we perform force measurements with 90 vol% and 80 vol%, we observed dynamic features. In Fig. 9, we show that despite using a slow approach rate of 0.42 ± 0.16 nm s−1, towards the beginning of the measurement (Fig. 9(a)) the layers are visible but not well defined. After longer times within the same experiment, Fig. 9(b), we observed the layers to become more well defined. 90 vol% EAN has a viscosity of about 8 mPa s (ref. 33) which is approximately 5 times less viscous than neat EAN; at this approach rate we do not see any variation in the longer range forces with varying velocity, and so the measurement is considered to be ‘quasi-static’. Thus, the variation in the near-surface forces with measurement time on the order of several hours appears to indicate a changing nature of the interfacial structure over this timescale. It is also possible that very small variations in the water content may occur over such times, although the observation of further variations over time at different water fractions indicates a different mechanism.
For 80 vol% EAN (Fig. 10), we observed less-defined layers as well as different asymptotic behaviour at about 118 min after injection time. This was carried out with surface approach speed of 0.6 nm s−1. In the successive measurement within the same experiment at 162 min, with surface approach at 1.3 nm s−1, we observed more structured layers, smaller surface separation at the innermost layer and longer decay lengths. The viscosity of 80 vol% EAN is about 6.3 mPa s.33 From our previous studies, 1.3 nm s−1 is within the range where the viscous force is not significant for long-range decay.30 This is also evidenced when we compare the force profiles at 235 min and 446 min which were measured at slow speeds of 0.8 nm s−1 and 0.6 nm s−1 showing very similar long-range decay.
Considering these observations together, it appears that the equilibration of the nearest surface layers of EAN can be very slow to evolve. This resonates with several previous reports of very slow dynamics of ionic liquids at interfaces,34,35 and it may be that the EAN–water mixture forms self-assembled nanostructure on mica surfaces over time.35
The longest range part of the interaction, a monotonic tail with decay lengths in the range of 7 nm for the highest EAN concentrations, has been compared quantitatively to the scaling analysis previously considered for ionic liquids and salt solutions in water. The present results are consistent with the previously-observed scaling, and do not indicate any clear difference between protic and non-protic fluids.
A final comment is to note the interesting qualitative similarity in the form of interaction forces measured across electrolytes at extremely low and extremely high ion concentrations. Referring back to eqn (2), we see a possible rationalisation for this. In fluid condensed matter (liquids), there is always at least one component at high density and so always (at least) one mode giving rise to an oscillatory decaying term in the potential of mean force between particles or surfaces across the fluid. In dilute electrolytes, this is the solvent (e.g. water), giving rise to ‘solvent (water) layering’; in highly concentrated electrolytes this is the salt and gives rise to ‘salt layering’ as seen here with 0.5 nm oscillations. In dilute electrolytes, the salt is at very low concentration and so gives rise to an additional plain exponential term arising from the ion–ion correlations, with decay parameter asymptotically tending towards the Debye length. In very concentrated electrolytes, the plain exponential decay with long decay length must arise from a contribution (eqn (2)) with low effective (renormalised) charge; fluctuating entities involving multiple associating (correlated) ions on the scale of the Bjerrum length.2,12 This phenomenon appears in the present experiments with protic ionic liquids, just as in the earlier measurements with non-protic ILs and with simple salt solutions. The nature of charge and its distribution in dense electrolyte solutions remains of interest.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3fd00042g |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |