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Do Ionic Liquids Slow Down in Stages?

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-11-14, 19:05 authored by Bichitra Borah, Gobin Raj Acharya, Diana Grajeda, Matthew S. Emerson, Matthew A. Harris, AM Milinda Abeykoon, Joshua Sangoro, Gary A. Baker, Andrew J. Nieuwkoop, Claudio J. Margulis
High impact recent articles have reported on the existence of a liquid–liquid (L–L) phase transition as a function of both pressure and temperature in ionic liquids (ILs) containing the popular trihexyltetradecylphosphonium cation (P666,14+), sometimes referred to as the “universal liquifier”. The work presented here reports on the structural-dynamic pathway from liquid to glass of the most well-studied IL comprising the P666,14+ cation. We present experimental and computational evidence that, on cooling, the path from the room-temperature liquid to the glass state is one of separate structural-dynamic changes. The first stage involves the slowdown of the charge network, while the apolar subcomponent is fully mobile. A second, separate stage entails the slowdown of the apolar domain. Whereas it is possible that these processes may be related to the liquid–liquid and glass transitions, more research is needed to establish this conclusively.

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