4.8 Article

Bioderived Ionic Liquids with Alkaline Metal Ions for Transient Ionics

Journal

SMALL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202302385

Keywords

bioderived materials; electrolytes; ionic gel; ionic liquid; transient electronics

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Choline lactate, a bioderived ionic liquid, shows potential for the development of biodegradable electrochemical devices. Adding metal ions to the ionic liquid imparts electrochemical characteristics, and combining it with poly(vinyl alcohol) results in a biodegradable ionic gel. An electrochromic device using a Li-ion containing ionic liquid successfully changes color, indicating intercalation of Li-ions into the WO3 crystal. These findings suggest that electrochemically active ionic liquids have applications in environmentally friendly devices, sustainable electronics, and bioresorbable/implantable devices.
Choline lactate, an ionic liquid composed of bioderived materials, offers an opportunity to develop biodegradable electrochemical devices. Although ionic liquids possess large potential windows, high conductivity, and are nonvolatile, they do not exhibit electrochemical characteristics such as intercalation pseudocapacitance, redox pseudocapacitance, and electrochromism. Herein, bioderived ionic liquids are developed, including metal ions, Li, Na, and Ca, to yield ionic liquid with electrochemical behavior. Differential scanning calorimetry results reveal that the ionic liquids remained in liquid state from 230.42 to 373.15 K. The conductivities of the ionic liquids with metal are lower than those of the pristine ionic liquid, whereas the capacitance change negligibly. A protocol of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development 301C modified MITI test (I) confirms that the pristine ionic liquid and ionic liquids with metal are readily biodegradable. Additionally, an ionic gel comprising the ionic liquid and poly(vinyl alcohol) is biodegradable. An electrochromic device is developed using an ionic liquid containing Li ions. The device successfully changes color at -2.5 V, demonstrating the intercalation of Li ions into the WO3 crystal. The results suggest that the electrochemically active ionic liquids have potential for the development of environmentally benign devices, sustainable electronics, and bioresorbable/implantable devices.

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