6533b850fe1ef96bd12a849e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Nanoscale organization in the fluorinated room temperature ionic liquid: Tetraethyl ammonium (trifluoromethanesulfonyl)(nonafluorobutylsulfonyl)imide
Giovanni Battista AppetecchiF. Lo CelsoLorenzo GontraniCharl J. JaftaOlga RussinaAlessandro TrioloJ. N. Canongia Lopessubject
Materials scienceGeneral Physics and AstronomyIonic bondingfluorinated02 engineering and technologyNeutron scattering010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesIonionic liquidsPhysics and Astronomy (all)chemistry.chemical_compoundMolecular dynamicsneutronSettore CHIM/02Side chainstructurePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAlkylionic liquidchemistry.chemical_classificationMesoscopic physics021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesx-raychemistryChemical physicsIonic liquidionic liquids; fluorinated; structure0210 nano-technologydescription
Fluorinated Room Temperature Ionic Liquids (FRTILs) are a branch of ionic liquids that is the object of growing interest for a wide range of potential applications, due to the synergic combination of specifically ionic features and those properties that stem from fluorous tails. So far limited experimental work exists on the micro-and mesoscopic structural organization in this class of compounds. Such a work is however necessary to fully understand morphological details at atomistic level that would have strong implications in terms of bulk properties. Here we use the synergy between X-ray and neutron scattering together with molecular dynamics simulations to access structural details of a technologically relevant FRTIL that is characterised by an anion bearing a long enough fluorinated tail to develop specific morphological features. In particular, we find the first experimental evidence that in FRTILs bearing an asymmetric bis(perfluoroalkyl) sulfonyl-imide anion, fluorous side chains tend to be spatially segregated into nm-scale spatial heterogeneities. This feature together with the well-established micro-segregation of side alkyl chains in conventional RTILs leads to the concept of triphilic ILs, whose technological applications are yet to be fully developed. Published by AIP Publishing.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-01-01 | The Journal of Chemical Physics |