Alyna
Lange
*a,
Nadia
Kapernaum
b,
Zaneta
Wojnarowska
c,
Lea
Holtzheimer
a,
Stefan
Mies
a,
Vance
Williams
d,
Frank
Gießelmann
b and
Andreas
Taubert
*a
aInstitute of Chemistry, University of Potsdam, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 24-25, 14476 Potsdam-Golm, Germany. E-mail: alylange@uni-potsdam.de; andreas.taubert@uni-potsdam.de
bInstitute of Physical Chemistry, University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 55, Stuttgart, Germany
cInstitute of Physics, University of Silesia in Katowice, 41-500 Chorzow, Poland
dDepartment of Chemistry, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, Canada
First published on 19th November 2024
A group of new zwitterion based ionic liquid crystals (ILCs) have been synthesized. Depending on the counter anion (mesylate or hydrogen sulfate) the phase behavior of the resulting ILCs is quite different. Mesylate based ILCs show complex phase behavior with multiple phases depending on the alkyl chain length. In contrast, hydrogen sulfate based systems always exhibit Colr phases irrespective of the alkyl chain length. The latter show much larger ILC mesophase windows and are thermally stable up to ca. 200 °C. All ILCs show reasonable ionic conductivities of up to 10−4 S cm−1 at elevated temperatures, making these ILCs candidates for intermediate temperature ionic conductors.
Most ILs only show low range order and their conductivities therefore show no anisotropy, meaning that the conductivity is identical in all directions. It may, however, be interesting to achieve anisotropic (ion) conduction in ILs, e.g. to improve ion transport in a specific direction in a fuel cell or battery. This can be achieved by mesoscale structuration of ILs, resulting in ionic liquid crystals (ILCs).7,8 The nanosegregation needed to achieve liquid crystalline (LC) self-organisation of the compounds is usually realized by introducing one or more long alkyl chains into the structure of the ILs.8–10 By introducing this hydrophobic part, the immiscibility between the ionic head group and the long alkyl chains leads to the desired mesoscale phase separation of the ionic and the hydrophobic domains. This results in long range ordered structures, that is, LCs or (in the case of ILs) ILCs.8,10
Like ILs, ILCs are also composed of ions, bound to different extents by ionic interaction.8,11,12 Thermotropic ILCs combine features of LCs and ILs (anisotropic conductivity, self-assembly and high ionic conductivities, electrochemical stability and “tuning” possibilities) and, like their non-ionic counterparts, they exhibit liquid crystalline phases between the solid and liquid states. Therefore, they are important candidates for flexible electronics or as safe and efficient electrolytes.8,11,13,14
For use as electrolytes in e.g. fuel cells, protic ILCs are needed.15 These are commonly synthesized by an acid–base reaction between the respective long-chained acids and bases. By choice of the acid and base it is also possible to tune the physical properties of the resulting ILCs.8 For satisfactory proton conduction, favorable transport of protons needs to be realized – and ILCs can facilitate this favorable transport due to their structure and anisotropic organization. The anisotropic mesoscale organization and concurrent separation of ionic and apolar domains in ILCs is therefore expected to enable fast target ion (proton) transport.8,16 Indeed, Mukai et al. have shown that proton conduction in some ILCs is indeed higher in the LC (SmA) phase compared to the liquid phase and that these materials can be used for the development of 2D anisotropic ion conducting materials.8,17
To achieve effective transport and therefore high conduction of selected target ions, another feature can be introduced into the ILCs. Namely, the tethering of cationic and anionic sites into the same molecule, creating so-called zwitterions (ZIs).8,12 As described by Goossens et al., in conventional ILs the transference number of target ions can be lowered significantly by the migration of other compound ions in the electric field.18 As zwitterions exhibit net neutrality due to their positively and negatively charged moieties located in the same molecule, they are expected to not move in an applied (external) field.8 This may lead to fast proton conduction via the Grotthuss mechanism rather than the slower vehicle mechanism because the movement of the larger ions (making up the IL or ILC) is essentially eliminated.18 Phosphonium based zwitterionic protic LCs that exhibit lyotropic LC behavior and columnar phases for 1D proton conduction have already been shown by Ueda et al.19 Moreover, Kobayashi et al. and Ichikawa et al. reported bicontinuous cubic ILCs on the basis of pyridinium ZIs for (solid) 3D proton conduction.15,20
The combination of a zwitterion with a Brønsted acid such as toluene sulfonic21–23 or methanesulfonic23 acid leads to zwitterionic ILs, where the proton is free to move between the sulfonate group of the zwitterion and the sulfonate group of the tosylate or mesylate anion, for example. Wojnarowska et al. have already shown that charge transport via the Grotthus mechanism is promoted if methanesulfonate is used as the anion in a zwitterionic protic IL (PIL).24 This article therefore describes the synthesis, the phase behavior, and the electrochemical properties of zwitterionic alkylammonium based protic ILCs with methanesulfonate and hydrogen sulfate anions vs. the influence of different alkyl chain lengths on the zwitterions and the type of anion (methanesulfonate or hydrogen sulfate). Fig. 1 shows the synthetic approach towards the ZI-based ILCs used in the current study.
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Fig. 1 Synthetic procedure for the zwitterionic ILCs: (a) synthesis of the sulfobetaine ZIs, and (b) synthesis of the zwitterionic ILCs. |
Nomenclature of the ZIs is as follows: DmCnS, where Dm is dimethyl, Cn is the alkyl tail with n = chain length of the alkyl tail (C10–C16), and S indicates the sulfonate group present in the zwitterion. For example, DmC10S is the zwitterion (Fig. 1) with a C10 alkyl chain.
The nomenclature of the ILCs is as follows: the ZI is designated as described above. Mesylate based ILCs are labelled DmCnS MeSO3 and hydrogen sulfate based ILCs are labelled DmCnS HSO4.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measurements were carried out using a Netzsch Polyma DSC 214. DSC values were recorded from −100 to 200 °C using liquid nitrogen cooling and a heating rate of 10 K min−1 or 5 K min−1. Heating and cooling cycles were repeated three times for reproducibility. Unless otherwise stated, data of the 2nd heating and cooling cycle are used and presented for analysis.
Except for DmC16S HSO4 all hydrogen sulfate containing ILCs show very broad bands in the IR spectra. This is not surprising as these ILCs are in their LC mesophase after synthesis (see Table 2 with the DSC data below) and broad IR bands might be the result of strong hydrogen bonding or cation–anion interactions or even anion–anion bonding in the ordered LC phase.34,36,37 As hydrogen bonded systems can exhibit a variety of different bond lengths and bond angles with a range of different vibrational frequencies, the bands themselves broaden. Hydrogen sulfate anions are also known for forming HSO4− chains or dimers.32,34,38,39
The thermal stability of electrolytes is a critical requirement for their safety and stability in electrochemical devices. Fig. 3 and Table 1 sum up the results of thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) measurements to determine the thermal stability of the ILCs.
T 150 [%] | T 600 [%] | T on [°C] | |
---|---|---|---|
T on: on-set decomposition temperature at 5% weight loss; T150: weight loss in % at 150 °C; T600: weight loss in % at 600 °C. | |||
DmC16S MeSO3 | 0.5 | 95.7 | 288.5 |
DmC14S MeSO3 | 1.0 | 93.8 | 295.1 |
DmC12S MeSO3 | 0.4 | 97.0 | 286.9 |
DmC10S MeSO3 | 0.4 | 97.2 | 292.5 |
DmC16S HSO4 | 0.2 | 94.2 | 279.0 |
DmC14S HSO4 | 1.4 | 94.1 | 262.1 |
DmC12S HSO4 | 0.6 | 92.0 | 277.4 |
DmC10S HSO4 | 0.9 | 88.3 | 277.6 |
All ILCs show a small mass loss between 0.2 and 1.4% up to 150 °C, which indicates a loss of residual methanol or moisture. Overall, all ILCs exhibit decomposition temperatures (with decomposition onset temperature Ton at a mass loss of 5%)40 between 262 and 295 °C. Ton for the mesylate based ILCs are around 290 °C and therefore slightly higher than for the hydrogen sulfate based ILCs, which have Ton of around 275 °C. This is an interesting observation, as other studies on protic ILs have shown the opposite trend,36–42 which is often explained by the strong hydrogen bonding in hydrogen sulfate based ILs.34 There seems to be no clear trend on whether hydrogen sulfate or mesylate based compounds exhibit higher thermal stabilities, as the current literature shows mixed information on this subject.40,41,43,44
This discrepancy – the fact that sometimes mesylates and sometime hydrogen sulfates show higher thermal stabilities – may be explained with the fact that these systems are (1) zwitterion-based providing a lot of additional interaction between the zwitterion, the mobile protons, and the anion, (2) highly hydrogen bonded both with the mesylate and the hydrogen sulfate anion,24 and (3) also experiencing a complex interaction of the alkyl tails, which may lead to additional van der Waals interactions further affecting the local interactions and mobilities. Overall, these ZI-based ILCs show a series of complementary and sometimes counteracting non-covalent interactions that make prediction of the relative thermal stabilities rather difficult.
The hydrogen sulfate based ILCs decompose in two (DmC10S HSO4 and DmC12S HSO4) or three (DmC14S HSO4 and DmC16S HSO4) steps. The first significant step shows a weight loss between 70–80% which ends between 355–370 °C. The second step for DmC10S HSO4 and DmC12S HSO4 is then a constant weight loss up to 600 °C. For DmC14S HSO4 and DmC16S HSO4 the second step up to 490 °C contains a small weight loss of around 8%, followed by a third step with a constant weight loss of up to 13%.
The thermal decomposition of the mesylate based ILCs occurs in three steps. The first weight loss occurring until 380–405 °C involves a sample loss of 65–70%. The second step of 13–20% sample weight loss can be seen up to 470 °C. The last decomposition step includes a weight loss of up to 17%. For all ILCs almost complete decomposition (88–97%) can be seen at 600 °C.
The thermal properties of the ILCs were further investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Fig. 4 and Fig. S3 (ESI†) show the thermograms of the 2nd heating and cooling cycles for all compounds. The ILCs show a significantly different behavior depending on the counter anion and the alkyl chain length. Indeed, a more complex thermal behavior for ILCs with longer chains has already been reported in the literature.45 The shorter chained ILCs DmC12S MeSO3, DmC10S MeSO3, DmC14S HSO4, DmC12S HSO4 and DmC10S HSO4 only show two processes upon 2nd heating and 2nd cooling – a glass transition and the transition from the mesophase into the isotropic liquid (Fig. S3, ESI†). The peak in the thermograms can therefore be identified as the isotropization temperature (Tiso, clearing point). Moreover, whereas the mesylate based compounds show delayed crystallization upon cooling, the hydrogen sulfate-based compounds remain in their LC state for months after cooling and storing in the laboratory at room temperature. Even when cooling to low temperatures in the DSC they remain in their LC state until Tg. This behavior has already been reported for some other LCs.15,46,47 These LCs are called glassy LCs (GLCs) in the literature.15,46,48–50
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Fig. 4 2nd heating and cooling DSC runs for (a) DmC16S MeSO3, (b) DmC16S HSO4, and (c) DmC16S MeSO3 with a heating/cooling rate of 5 K min−1 (zoomed in to 80–200 °C), and (d) DmC14S MeSO3. |
DmC16S MeSO3 and DmC14S MeSO3 both show (cold) crystallization and melting processes upon heating (Fig. 4a and d). However, DmC14S MeSO3 exhibits one LC phase on heating which turns into the isotropic phase at around 120 °C and two LC phases on cooling (Fig. 4d). The second LC phase between 105–78 °C is therefore metastable, as it only appears upon cooling.18,51,52 This behavior is also clearly seen in polarized optical microscopy (POM, Fig. S4, ESI†), as this phase cannot always be observed when the sample is cooled. In contrast to DmC14S MeSO3, DmC16S MeSO3, where the alkyl tail is longer by two carbon atoms, shows two mesophases upon heating and cooling. Both phases are therefore stable LC phases that can also clearly be observed via POM, see below. Both phases are, however, more clearly seen when slower heating/cooling rates are used (Fig. 4c).
The most complex thermal behavior is observed for DmC16S HSO4, Fig. 4b. Upon heating, this compound shows several cold crystallization and melting processes, suggesting the presence of various crystal structures and structural re-arrangements in the sample upon heating. The temperature window of the first mesophase (68–145 °C) is quite similar to that of DmC16S MeSO3. The transition from the second mesophase into the isotropic phase, however, appears at a higher temperature (≥200 °C) which is accompanied by the slow decomposition of the compound (as evidenced by TGA data, Fig. 3). Upon cooling DmC16S HSO4 only shows the transition from the second into the first mesophase at around 125 °C and one crystallization process.
All relevant transition temperatures can be found in Table 2 and Fig. 5. When comparing Tiso of the shorter chained ILCs an influence of the ZI chain length can be observed. The shorter the chain on the zwitterion, the lower Tiso of the compound. This observation has already been described in the literature for several other ILs and ILCs.15,53–55
DSC results of second heating/second coolinga | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
T g | Cr–LC | LC1–LC2 | LC–I | ||
a LC1/LC2: 1st and 2nd mesophases in compounds DmC16S MeSO3, DmC14S MeSO3 and DmC16S HSO4, Cr: crystalline, I: isotropic. b Value of last melting process. c Determined in measurement with a 5 K min−1 cooling rate. Precise assignment of LC phases via POM and XRD described further below. | |||||
DmC16S MeSO3 | Heating | −12.7 | 66.8 (−24.18) | 147.2 (−0.26) | 189.0 (−0.39) |
Cooling | — | −8.9 (19.67) | 133.8 (0.32)c | 189.2 (0.41) | |
DmC14S MeSO3 | Heating | −35.4 | 60.8 (−9.04) | — | 118.5 (−0.48) |
Cooling | −44.4 | — | 82.4 (0.24) | 108.7 (0.17) | |
DmC12S MeSO3 | Heating | −31.3 | — | — | 95.0 (−0.41) |
Cooling | −36.0 | — | — | 92.8 (0.43) | |
DmC10S MeSO3 | Heating | −32.5 | — | — | 41.6 (−0.53) |
Cooling | −31.7 | — | — | 36.0 (0.52) | |
DmC16S HSO4 | Heating | — | 68.8 (−8.27)b | 144.7 (−0.60) | >200 °C Dec. |
Cooling | — | −18.5 (10.55) | 131.2 (0.65) | >200 °C Dec. | |
DmC14S HSO4 | Heating | −34.3 | — | — | >200 °C Dec. |
Cooling | −48.6 | — | — | >200 °C Dec. | |
DmC12S HSO4 | Heating | −25.8 | — | — | 195.1 (−0.68) |
Cooling | −26.0 | — | — | >200 °C (0.99) | |
DmC10S HSO4 | Heating | −18.3 | — | — | 119.6 (−0.49) |
Cooling | −12.3 | — | — | 127.1 (0.47) |
![]() | ||
Fig. 5 ILC phase transition temperatures of 2nd DSC heating (h) and cooling (c) runs for (a) mesylate based ILCs, and (b) hydrogen sulfate based ILCs. |
Furthermore, the hydrogen sulfate-based ILCs exhibit a broader mesophase window compared to the mesylate based ones; they only show a glass transition at around −12 to −48 °C and Tiso at around 200 °C. This might be due to the extensive hydrogen bond network associated with hydrogen sulfate based ILs and will be further discussed below. Overall, all phase transitions show very similar values upon heating and cooling and therefore only small hysteresis. Hysteresis of thermal transitions is a common observation for ILCs and is usually attributed to supercooling and/or high viscosity of the system.18,51,56,57
For a full assignment of the LC phases analysis via XRD measurements and POM is necessary. XRD analysis was conducted as WAXS and SAXS measurements, respectively, to assign the mesophase geometry. This analysis was more straightforward for the hydrogen sulfate based compounds, as all of these show a Colr phase, with DmC16S HSO4 exhibiting an additional cubic phase at higher temperatures. The Colr phase of DmC16S HSO4 hereby exhibits three sharp reflections at 39.8 Å, 23.5 Å, and 20.5 Å. The first reflection can be assigned as an overlapping of the two big reflections usually occurring in Colr phases, which are (200) and (110).58 The second reflection is then the (310) and the third again an overlapping of (400) and (220) with the lattice parameters a = 81.0 Å and b = 45.3 Å. The wide-angle measurements moreover show a broad halo, associated with the liquid-like disorder of the alkyl side chain in the ZIs. At higher temperatures DmC16S HSO4 shows an altered diffraction pattern, which can be assigned to a Cub phase with reflections at 37.6 Å, 24.7 Å, and 20.9 Å, corresponding to the Miller indices of (200), (311), and (321) and a black POM image under crossed polarizers. The respective 2D diffractograms, integrated diffraction patterns and POM images are shown in Fig. 6. The presence of a cubic mesophase above a columnar one is quite peculiar, as the mesophase order is usually the other way around.59–63 However, there are some literature examples, where a cubic mesophase does indeed appear at higher temperatures than a columnar phase.64–66
![]() | ||
Fig. 6 Comparison of 2D diffraction patterns, integrated diffractograms and POM images for the two mesophases of DmC16S HSO4 for (a) Colr at 45 °C and (b) Cub at 170 °C. |
The shorter chained hydrogen sulfate based ILCs all show reflections that can be assigned to the same Miller indices found for the lower temperature mesophase of DmC16S HSO4. However, these compounds show smaller lattice parameters, which is in agreement with the size of the respective ions (the shorter the chain-length of the cation the smaller the lattice parameters). The diffractogram of DmC10S HSO4 only shows two clear reflections. This can be assigned to the less ordered nature of the system when the alkyl chain is shorter. We nevertheless assign the same mesophase to this compound based on the assignment of the longer chained ILCs and the respective POM images. All XRD assignments and values can be found in Table 3 and the respective POM images and diffraction patterns in Fig. 7 and Fig. S5, S6 (ESI†). The respective POM images show typical textures associated with a columnar mesophase, as they exhibit fan-shaped textures in the temperature windows corresponding with the Colr phase.
Mesophase T/°C | Reflections/Å exp. (calc.) | Miller indices | Lattice parameters/Å | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
DmC16S MeSO3 | Cub at 95 °C | 37.6 | (37.4) | (211) | a = 91.3 |
32.6 | (32.3) | (220) | |||
20.3 | (21.0) | (331) | |||
19.9 | (19.9) | (421) | |||
5.4 | Halo | ||||
DmC16S MeSO3 | SmA at 170 °C | 34.4 | (100) | d = 34.4 | |
5.5 | Halo | ||||
DmC14S MeSO3 | Cub at 75 °C | 34.3 | (34.5) | (211) | a = 84.5 |
29.9 | (29.9) | (220) | |||
19.3 | (19.4) | (331) | |||
— | (18.4) | (421) | |||
5.5 | Halo | ||||
DmC12S MeSO3 | Colh at 20 °C | 30.6 | (30.6) | (100) | a = 35.3 |
17.6 | (17.7) | (110) | |||
15.3 | (15.3) | (200) | |||
5.4 | (@60 °C) | Halo | |||
DmC10S MeSO3 | Colh at 20 °C | 26.8 | (26.8) | (100) | a = 30.9 |
15.5 | (15.5) | (110) | |||
13.4 | (13.4) | (200) | |||
5.4 | Halo | ||||
DmC16S HSO4 | Colr at 45 °C | 39.8 | (40.5) | (200) | a = 81.0 |
(39.7) | (110) | b = 45.5 | |||
23.5 | (23.7) | (310) | |||
20.5 | (20.3) | (400) | |||
(19.8) | (220) | ||||
5.4 | Halo | ||||
DmC16S HSO4 | Cub at 170 °C | 37.6 | (37.2) | (200) | a = 74.4 |
24.7 | (24.8) | (311) | |||
20.9 | (20.7) | (321) | |||
5.5 | Halo | ||||
DmC14S HSO4 | Colr at 75 °C | 35.6 | (36.3) | (200) | a = 72.5 |
(36.0) | (110) | b = 41.5 | |||
20.9 | (20.9) | (310) | |||
18.2 | (18.1) | (400) | |||
(18.0) | (220) | ||||
5.3 | Halo | ||||
DmC12S HSO4 | Colr at 25 °C | 32.2 | (32.5) | (200) | a = 65.0 |
(32.2) | (110) | b = 37.5 | |||
19.2 | (18.7) | (310) | |||
16.5 | (16.3) | (400) | |||
(16.1) | (220) | ||||
4.8 | Halo | ||||
DmC10S HSO4 | Colr at 25 °C | 28.7 | (29.3) | (200) | a = 57.5 |
(29.1) | (110) | b = 34.2 | |||
— | (16.9) | (310) | |||
14.8 | (14.6) | (400) | |||
(14.5) | (220) | ||||
5.3 | Halo |
![]() | ||
Fig. 7 Comparison of 2D diffraction patterns, diffractograms and POM images of C12 based ILCs (a) DmC12S HSO4 at 25 °C, and (b) DmC12S MeSO3 at 20 °C. |
The mesylate based ILCs show more complex behavior in both WAXS and SAXS, as we can overall find three different mesophases for these compounds: Cub, Colh, and SmA. As can be seen in Fig. S6a and b (ESI†), DmC16S MeSO3 exhibits a Cub phase at lower and SmA phase at higher temperatures. As for DmC16S HSO4, the cubic mesophase is characterized by a black POM image. The respective diffractogram shows reflections at 37.6 Å, 32.6 Å, 20.3 Å, and 19.9 Å, corresponding with the following indices: (211), (220), (331), and (421).
At higher temperatures, DmC16S MeSO3 shows only one prominent reflection in the diffractogram, and the occurrence of a birefringent texture in the POM, indicating a SmA mesophase.
While DmC14S MeSO3 shows two phase transitions in the DSC cooling run, the mesophase at higher temperatures cannot be observed in the diffractograms at the respective temperature and only un-reliably while cooling under the microscope. This phase is therefore metastable and only the Cub phase is indeed a stable mesophase for this sample. In contrast to the longer chained compounds, the ILCs DmC12S MeSO3 and DmC10S MeSO3 (with their shorter alkyl chains) do not show a cubic, but a different mesophase, which is in agreement with the literature.67 DmC12S MeSO3 and DmC10S MeSO3 both exhibit a columnar hexagonal order, with the reflections corresponding to (100), (110), and (200) and fan-like textures in the POM images (Fig. 7 and Fig. S6, ESI†). When comparing the unit cell dimensions of the columnar mesophases with the ion sizes of the LC compounds, the unit cells show smaller dimensions than the respective ions. This can however be explained by the chemical structure of the cations, which consist mainly of long alkyl chains. These long alkyl chains can coil up and overlap and therefore the chains build a liquid-like ordered hydrophobic region in the middle of the column (see Fig. 8). This leads to smaller dimensions than expected by the sheer size of the ions.
Overall, all ILC mesophases are typical mesophases also described in the literature for other ILCs – zwitterionic61,68–71 and non-zwitterionic.45,60,63,72 Interestingly, there are significant differences in the mesophase behavior between the hydrogen sulfate based and the mesylate based ILCs:
1. Broader temperature windows of the mesophases in the HSO4 based ILCs. These broader temperature windows and higher Tiso of the mesophases for the HSO4 based ILCs have already been discussed above and are tentatively attributed to a presumably more extensive hydrogen bond network in these ILCs. Moreover, it has already been shown that smaller anions and longer alkyl chains can significantly increase Tiso in ILCs as electrostatic interactions have a significant influence on mesophase stability.45,59,67,69,70,73,74 In the current case, the hydrogen sulfate anion is smaller than the mesylate anion and indeed the hydrogen sulfate based systems show higher Tiso.
2. A higher number of different mesophases for MeSO3 based ILCs. One possible explanation may be that a number of factors contribute to this behavior: (i) a slightly larger anion, (ii) a somewhat amphiphilic nature of the mesylate anion (as opposed to the hydrogen sulfate anion), and (iii) a lower number of hydrogen bonding sites due to the presence of the methyl group in the mesylate anion. In combination, these three effects may lead to higher structural flexibility in the mesylate based ILCs. This in turn may facilitate the formation of a larger number of ILC phases.
3. Different types of columnar mesophases even for shorter chained ILCs (Colhvs. Colr, see Fig. 7). Fig. 8 shows a packing model for both DmC12S based compounds. Overall, the dimensions of the unit cells are quite similar for both compounds. We tentatively attribute the slight distortion to the presence of the methyl group in the mesylate anion and therefore differences in hydrogen-bonding and overall ionic and hydrophobic interactions. Possibly, the mesylate anion resides in the ionic section and in the more hydrophobic section, while the hydrogen sulfates are predominantly located in the ionic section of the ILCs. A wide hydrogen-bonding network associated with the hydrogen sulfate anions along the columns, but also between neighboring columns, may increase the volume fraction of the hydrophilic domains and therefore lead to the slight distortion between the Colr and Colh arrangements.
In order to support the model shown in Fig. 8 with the ionic domains on the outside of the columns we have performed DFT calculations of DmC12S MeSO3. The image below (Fig. 9) shows the ball and stick (a) and space filling model (b); the hydrophilic portion – including the methanesulfonic acid – is shown in blue, while the hydrophobic chain is shown in salmon (pink). The partial molecular volume of the hydrophilic group (i.e. hydrophobic: total volume) was calculated to be 0.40. Therefore, in the C10 and C12 derivatives, the hydrophobic chain occupies an appreciably smaller volume than the hydrophilic section, and hence should reside in the center of the column. As this chain increases in length, its size approaches that of the hydrophilic portion, the columnar nanostructure is replaced first with the cubic phase (C14), followed by the lamellar phase. If the situation was reversed, i.e. the hydrophobic volume was larger in the case of the C10 and C12, increasing the chain length would not push the mesogens into the regime of cubic and lamellar phases; they would remain columnar. Thus, the volume calculations are fully consistent with the series trend. Note that the charged groups are moreover able to interact strongly when they are on the exterior of the column, since they are surrounded by other charged groups from both the same column and neighboring column.
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Fig. 9 DFT calculation results for DmC12S MeSO3: (a) ball and stick model, and (b) space filling model (blue: hydrophilic portion including the anion, salmon: hydrophobic alkyl tail). |
The electrochemical behavior of the ILCs was furthermore investigated by cyclic voltammetry (CV) to determine the electrochemical stability window (ΔEW = Eanodic − Ecathodic). ΔEW is defined as the region where no noteworthy faradaic current is observed in the voltammogram.75–77 CV is therefore an important tool to assess their applicability for e.g. electrochemical devices.
Fig. 10 shows the voltammograms of all ILCs (except the DmC16S compounds) grouped by anion (a, b) and a comparison between the two DmC12S based ILCs (c). All voltammograms, independent of the anion, show a clear reduction process starting around −0.5 to 0.6 V. This process can be assigned to the reduction of the cation, i.e., the reduction of protons, which is a typical process for protic ILs.78–80 Overall, the mesylate based ILCs show a slightly higher stability towards reduction compared to the hydrogen sulfate based ILCs. This has already been observed by Shmukler et al. for diethylammonium (DEA) based ILs,42 whereas they found the opposite trend for ILs containing the triethylammonium (TEA) cation.43 Moreover, Rana et al. found ILs based on the mesylate anion to also have one of the highest stabilities towards reduction in a series of similar ILs (with mesylate, triflate, bistriflimide anions).78
![]() | ||
Fig. 10 Cyclic voltammograms of (a) hydrogensulfate based ILCs, (b) mesylate based ILCs, and (c) a comparison of DmC12S based ILCs. |
An analogous observation can be made for the anodic side of the voltammograms. Here, the mesylate-based compounds show a higher stability (of up to +0.15 V) towards oxidation. The mesylate anion has already been reported to be rather stable towards oxidation and is often one of the most stable anions in a series of protic ILs.43,81 In spite of this, for the aforementioned IL diethylammonium mesylate its hydrogen sulfate based counterpart showed higher oxidation stability.42
Generally speaking, however, oxidative processes around +1.4–1.6 V for the ILCs investigated in this study are in good agreement with results published for other protic ILs based on the same anions.40,42,43,82,83 Overall, the size or composition of the ZIs in this study do not seem to influence the electrochemical stability, whereas the anion has a slight influence on both the stability towards oxidation and towards reduction (see Table 4). Therefore, the mesylate based ILCs show slightly wider ΔEW, with the most stable compound being DmC14S MeSO3. In general, the ΔEW of the ILCs investigated in this study are comparable to those found for other protic ILs.40,41,43,84
Compound | Potential limits [V vs. Fc/Fc+] | ΔEW [V] | |
---|---|---|---|
Anodic | Cathodic | ||
a DmC16S MeSO3 and DmC16S HSO4 were not measured as they show limited solubility in the CV measuring solution. | |||
ACN | 1.87 | −2.40 | 4.27 |
DmC14S MeSO3 | 1.56 | −0.60 | 2.16 |
DmC12S MeSO3 | 1.59 | −0.54 | 2.13 |
DmC10S MeSO3 | 1.54 | −0.60 | 2.14 |
DmC14S HSO4 | 1.45 | −0.51 | 1.96 |
DmC12S HSO4 | 1.43 | −0.50 | 1.93 |
DmC10S HSO4 | 1.40 | −0.50 | 1.90 |
The ionic conductivities of the ILCs were analyzed via broadband dielectric spectroscopy (DS). Table 5 shows the conductivities of all ILCs at three different temperatures. As the ILCs show quite different phase behavior and mesophase types over varying temperature windows, a straightforward comparison of ionic conductivities by simply comparing the data for one specific temperature is not easily possible. Therefore, Table 5 shows the ionic conductivities at room temperature (20 °C), 90 °C and 150 °C. Indices denote the state of the compounds at the respective temperature.
σ 20°C [S cm−1] | σ 90°C [S cm−1] | σ 150°C [S cm−1] | |
---|---|---|---|
DmC16S MeSO3 | 5.3 × 10−13 Cub | 3.7 × 10−8 Cub | 3.2 × 10−6SmA |
DmC14S MeSO3 | 1.0 × 10−9 Cub | 2.4 × 10−6 Cub | 1.3 × 10−4 I |
DmC12S MeSO3 | 4.8 × 10−8 Colh | 2.5 × 10−5 Colh | 5.1 × 10−4 I |
DmC10S MeSO3 | 1.8 × 10−7 Colh | 5.6 × 10−5 I | 6.7 × 10−4 I |
DmC16S HSO4 | 1.9 × 10−7 Colr | 3.0 × 10−5 Colr | 2.6 × 10−4 Cub |
DmC14S HSO4 | 2.9 × 10−7 Colr | 3.6 × 10−5 Colr | 3.0 × 10−4 Colr |
DmC12S HSO4 | 1.6 × 10−7 Colr | 3.1 × 10−5 Colr | 3.2 × 10−4 Colr |
DmC10S HSO4 | 1.1 × 10−6 Colr | 1.2 × 10−4 Colr | 1.1 × 10−3 I |
Fig. 11 shows the ionic conductivities vs. 1000 T−1 for all ILCs. Overall, the ionic conductivities increase with increasing temperature and also clearly show the respective phase transitions (Fig. S7, ESI†). The mesylate-based ILCs hereby show a clear dependency of the ionic conductivity on chain-length. The conductivities decrease with increasing chain length of the ZIs. However, the differences in conductivity are more pronounced when the chains get longer, as the values for DmC12S MeSO3 and DmC10S MeSO3 are quite similar. The pronounced differences in the conductivities might therefore not only be explained by the increase in chain length, but more importantly by the mesophase type of the respective ILCs. As the two shorter chained ILCs both exhibit a Colh mesophase, their ionic conductivities are less influenced by the differences in chain length, as the ion conduction inside the mesophase could appear along the columns, independent on the size of the ZI. The differences in chain length do, however, have an influence on the conductivity in the Cub phases exhibited by DmC16S MeSO3 and DmC14S MeSO3. Here, the longer chain seems to significantly influence the possible conduction pathways, as the longer chains expand the overall hydrophobic domains and might therefore limit possibilities for conduction.
![]() | ||
Fig. 11 Ionic conductivities of (a) mesylate based ILCs, and (b) hydrogensulfate based ILCs from room temperature to elevated temperatures. |
Overall, the hydrogen sulfate-based ILCs in their Colr mesophase show slightly higher ionic conductivities than their mesylate-based counterparts (Fig. S7, ESI†). Moreover, the chain lengths of the ZIs do not show such an influence as for the mesylate ILCs. All three longer chained hydrogen sulfate-based ILCs exhibit almost equal ionic conductivities. This suggests that the bulk conductivity measured for these systems is not significantly influenced by the chain length, as conduction seems to arise along the columns, as previously seen for DmC12S MeSO3 and DmC10S MeSO3. It is therefore independent of the actual size of the cation structure. This is in agreement with the results found by DSC measurements, where all three long chained ILCs show similar behavior and high Tiso. Moreover, it has already been shown in the literature that longer alkyl chains do not always correspond with lower ionic conductivities.45 DmC10S HSO4, however, shows a higher conductivity than the longer-chained compounds. This is in agreement with a slightly different phase behavior in the form of lower Tiso found via DSC. One possible explanation might be that DmC10S HSO4 is the last representative in the hydrogen sulfate group to show LC behavior (with DmC8S HSO4 being liquid) and might therefore already experience significantly less intermolecular interactions and lower viscosity, lowering Tiso but increasing the conductivity. Overall, DmC10S HSO4 exhibits the highest conductivities over the temperature range investigated. However, the highest ionic conductivity in an LC phase at 150 °C is observed for DmC12S HSO4.
The literature is not conclusive in regards to comparisons of ionic conductivities of mesylate and hydrogen sulfate-based compounds. For example, Shmukler et al. found higher conductivities for a series of TEA based ILs with mesylate compared to hydrogen sulfate as the anion,43 whereas they made the opposite observation for DEA based ILs and the same anions.42 However, the ionic conductivities found for the zwitterionic ILCs of this study are comparable with other (zwitterionic) ILCs found in the literature.45,59,62,85 Soberats et al. described sulfobetaine-based ILCs that showed a maximum conductivity of 10−4 S cm−1 in the cubic phase at 130 °C.71 ILCs based on a long-chained benzoic acid and sulfobetaine zwitterions were reported by Qiao et al. They found higher conductivities for shorter zwitterions with a maximum conductivity of 10−5 S cm−1 at 110 °C in the lamellar phase.69
All ILCs clearly show non-Arrhenius behavior for their conductivities. This is illustrated by a curvature in the graphs showing a non-linear dependence of conductivity on inverse temperature, as can be clearly seen in figure sigma (Fig. 11). This non-Arrhenius behavior is characterized by a curvature of the graphs, which has been observed for many ILs and ILCs.55,86–89 The conductivity of all ILCs is therefore best described with the Vogel–Fulcher–Tamann (VFT) relationship (eqn (1)).90–92 In this equation, σ0 represents the maximum conductivity at infinite temperature, T0 is the ideal glass transition temperature and B is the pseudo activation energy (or an adjustable parameter). B is hereby related to segmental mobility as the dependence of the conductivity on the VFT equation suggests a liquid-like nature of the system and activation energies that are more dependent on segmental or side relaxation dynamics than elastic or electrostatic contributions.93–96
The results of the VFT fitting can be found in Table 6 and representative VFT fits for DmC16S HSO4, DmC12S HSO4 and DmC12S MeSO3 are shown in Fig. S8 (ESI†). It is hereby noteworthy that for DmC16S HSO4 and DmC16S MeSO3 two individual VFT plots were used, as these ILC exhibit two mesophases.
![]() | (1) |
σ 0 [S cm−1] | B [K] | T 0 [K] | LC | |
---|---|---|---|---|
DmC16S MeSO3 | 2.1 × 10−2 | 738.2 | 235.0 | SmA |
1.5 × 101 | 1734.4 | 162.4 | Cub | |
DmC14S MeSO3 | 2.7 × 10−0 | 1196.1 | 166.0 | Cub |
DmC12S MeSO3 | 5.3 × 10−1 | 799.6 | 179.5 | Colh |
DmC10S MeSO3 | 1.0 × 10−1 | 600.2 | 188.4 | Colh |
DmC16S HSO4 | 1.7 × 10−0 | 1193.7 | 109.9 | Cub |
3.2 × 10−1 | 800.1 | 164.4 | Colr | |
DmC14S HSO4 | 1.7 × 10−1 | 707.6 | 170.3 | Colr |
DmC12S HSO4 | 2.7 × 10−1 | 746.5 | 173.3 | Colr |
DmC10S HSO4 | 3.4 × 10−1 | 664.6 | 171.1 | Colr |
When comparing the B values in Table 6 the same observations as already seen for the conductivities can be made. For the mesylate-based compounds comparison of the B values is not straightforward, as B is determined in different mesophases. Overall though, B is lower for shorter chains and more or less follows the trend C16 ≈ C14 > C12 > C10, with DmC10S MeSO3 showing the smallest pseudo activation energy of all ILCs studied here. For the hydrogen sulfate-based ILCs all B values with the exception of DmC16S HSO4 in the Cub phase are quite similar. This again hints at the formation of the same mesophase, as already discussed above. All pseudo activation energies for the ILCs in this study are comparable with values found for other ILCs or ILs analyzed via VFT fitting.41,96–98
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d4cp03060e |
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