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(Invited) Ionic Liquids at Electrified Interfaces: From Double Layers to Decomposition

Tuesday, 2 October 2018: 11:20
Mars 1/2/3/4 (Sunrise Center)
J. B. Haskins, H. Yildirim, C. Bauschlicher, and J. W. Lawson (NASA Ames Research Center)
Ionic liquids are versatile electrolytes whose properties at electrified interfaces have the potential to enable technologies such as supercapacitors and Li-metal battery anodes. At electrified carbon surfaces, ionic liquids form an electric double layer that stores energy and provides the foundation for supercapacitors. At electrified lithium surfaces, certain ionic liquids decompose to form a solid electrolyte interphase that has the potential to stabilize Li-metal anodes in rechargable batteries. The behavior of two ionic liquids of technological importance, [pyr14][TFSI] and [EMIM][BF4], are examined at these electrified interfaces through molecular dynamics and ab initio techniques.