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Corresponding states theory for the freezing of ionic liquids

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:26 authored by Ravichandar BabaraoRavichandar Babarao, Jiang Jianwen, Leslie Woodcock
Corresponding states analyses for understanding the freezing temperatures of existing ionic liquids, and predicting freezing properties of ionic liquids yet to be discovered are described. "Room temperature" ionic liquids exist as such because they broadly obey a scaling relationship that describes all 1:1 electrolytes, including the alkali halides. In a zeroth-order treatment, the reduced freezing temperature (Tf*) is simply expressed in units of a characteristic ion-ion pair potential energy containing a single size or length parameter (r0): Tf* = kBTf r0/e2, where kB is Boltzmann's constant. All ionic liquids in the same conformal group have the same reduced freezing point (Tf*). Organic ionic liquids have r0 values roughly 3-times greater than those of alkali halides, which melt around 1000 K, hence their room temperature freezing points. Corresponding states analyses are reported for conformal groupings obtained for both the DME (distance of minimum energy) definition of r0 and also the scaling obtained from the sum of the isolated cation and anion polarizability trace radii (PTR). We discuss the inclusion of first-order effects of nonconformable perturbations, such as the polarizability anisotropy and ion-size assymmetry. Scaling concepts promise to be a valuable tool for predicting freezing points of ionic liquids.

History

Journal

Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research

Volume

50

Start page

234

End page

238

Total pages

5

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2011 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006068393

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-11-30