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Metal ion adsorption at the ionic liquid-mica interface

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 15:22 authored by Samila McDonald, Aaron ElbourneAaron Elbourne, Gregory Warr, Rob Atkin
Mica has been employed in many studies of ionic liquid (IL) interfaces on account of its atomic smoothness and well defined surface properties. However, until now it has been unclear whether ions dissolved in ILs can compete with the IL cation and adsorb to mica charge sites. In this work amplitude modulated atomic force microscopy (AM-AFM) has been used to probe metal ion adsorption at the interface of mica with propylammonium nitrate (PAN), a room temperature IL. Lithium, sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium nitrate salts were added to PAN at a concentration of ∼60 mM. Aluminum nitrate was also investigated, but only at 5 mM because its solubility in PAN is much lower. The AM-AFM images obtained when the metal ions were present are strikingly different to that of pure PAN, indicating that the ions compete effectively with the propylammonium cation and adsorb to negatively charged sites on the mica surface despite their much lower concentration. This is a consequence of electrostatic attractions between the mica charge sites and the metal ions being significantly stronger than for the propylammonium cation; compared to the metal ions the propylammonium charged group is relatively constrained sterically. A distinct honeycomb pattern is noted for the PAN + Al 3+ system, less obviously for the divalent ions and not at all for monovalent ions. This difference is attributed to the strength of electrostatic interactions between metal ions and mica charge sites increasing with the ion charge, which means that divalent and (particularly) trivalent ions are located more precisely above the charged sites of the mica lattice. The images obtained allow important distinctions between metal ion adsorption at mica-water and mica-PAN interfaces to be made.

Funding

Molecular scale engineering of solid/ionic liquid interfaces

Australian Research Council

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Green working liquids for an energy efficient future

Australian Research Council

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Interfacial mapping facility

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Nanoscale

Volume

8

Issue

2

Start page

906

End page

914

Total pages

9

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016

Former Identifier

2006080868

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-01-03

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