4.8 Article

Microemulsions as Emerging Electrolytes: The Correlation of Structure to Electrochemical Response

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages 20179-20189

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c00181

Keywords

microemulsion; small-angle neutron scattering; bicontinuous; cyclic voltammetry; electrochemistry; flow battery

Funding

  1. Breakthrough Electrolytes for Energy Storage, an Energy Frontier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0019409]
  2. National Institute of Standards and Technology, U.S. Department of Commerce

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This study describes the structural studies of microemulsions prepared from water, toluene, butanol, and polysorbate 20. Scattering techniques and analysis methods were used to investigate their structural characteristics and their effects on electrochemical response. The findings provide essential information for the formulation of microemulsions as electrolytes for energy storage.
We describe the structural studies of microemulsions (mu Es) prepared from water, toluene, butanol, and polysorbate 20 scattering was used to monitor the development of the bicontinuous system as a function of the water-to-surfactant mass ratio on a constant oil-to-surfactant dilution line, revealing how the domain size, correlation length, amphiphilicity factor, and bending moduli change with composition. Kratky and Porod analyses are also employed, providing further structural detail of the scattering domains. We demonstrate that controlling the water-to-surfactant ratio with a constant oil-to-surfactant dilution affects the bicontinuous phase, reveals a sizeable compositional region with structural similarities, and provides insight into the correlation of structure to physical properties. Voltammetric results are presented to examine how the evolution of the bicontinuous structure formed in a mu E prepared from water, toluene, butanol, and PS20 contributes to the electrochemical response. These findings, therefore, provide essential information that will guide the formulation of mu Es as electrolytes for energy storage.

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