Issue 6, 2013

On the evaporation, bonding, and adsorbate capture of an ionic liquid on Au(111)

Abstract

Temperature programmed desorption has been used to measure the bonding of 1-methyl-3-ethylimidiazolium bis[(trifluoromethyl)sulfonyl]imide, [C2C1Im][Tf2N], to Au(111), and the bonding of acetone within the ionic liquid (IL) at both the liquid–vacuum and liquid–Au(111) interfaces. Multilayer evaporation the ionic liquid occurred with an activation energy of 126 ± 5 kJ mol−1 and a pre-exponential term of 1016±1 s−1, the evaporation mechanism being the direct emission into the vacuum of an ion pair from within the liquid surface. [C2C1Im][Tf2N] chemisorbed to Au(111) had an activation energy for desorption which varied from 158 to 132 kJ mol−1 for a coverage change of 0 → θ → 1.0. The chemisorbed layer was thought to comprise a single layer of co-planar ions at θ = 0.5 with dipoles parallel to the surface, and a bi-layer at θ = 1 with dipoles perpendicular to the surface. The acetone experiments consisted of a layer of porous ionic liquid glass deposited on top of a layer of solid acetone at 100 K. During desorption acetone was captured within the ionic under-layer of the glass with an activation energy for subsequent desorption that dropped from 54 to 43 kJ mol−1 for 0 → θ → 1.0. This variation in energy is thought to be due to a range of chemical environments within the ionic under-layer.

Graphical abstract: On the evaporation, bonding, and adsorbate capture of an ionic liquid on Au(111)

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
09 Jan 2013
Accepted
25 Mar 2013
First published
25 Mar 2013

Chem. Sci., 2013,4, 2519-2529

On the evaporation, bonding, and adsorbate capture of an ionic liquid on Au(111)

S. G. Hessey and R. G. Jones, Chem. Sci., 2013, 4, 2519 DOI: 10.1039/C3SC00072A

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