4.6 Article

A physico-chemical investigation of highly concentrated potassium acetate solutions towards applications in electrochemistry

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 1139-1145

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0cp04151c

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Funding

  1. Ministry of University and Research (MIUR)

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Water-in-salt solutions with high salt concentration have unique features attracting attention in electrochemistry. However, systematic studies on the physical-chemical properties of highly concentrated KAC solutions are lacking. High-concentration KAC solutions exhibit good room temperature conductivity values and a large electrochemical potential window.
Water-in-salt solutions, i.e. solutions in which the amount of salt by volume or weight is larger than that of the solvent, are attracting increasing attention in electrochemistry due to their distinct features that often include decomposition potentials much higher than those of lower concentration solutions. Despite the high solubility of potassium acetate (KAC) in water at room temperature (up to 25 moles of salt per kg of solvent), the low cost, and the large availability, the use of highly concentrated KAC solutions is still limited to a few examples in energy storage applications and a systematic study of their physical-chemical properties is lacking. To fill this gap, we have investigated the thermal, rheological, electrical, electrochemical, and spectroscopic features of KAC/water solutions in the compositional range between 1 and 25 mol kg(-1). We show the presence of a transition between the salt-in-solvent and solvent-in-salt regimes in the range of 10-15 mol kg(-1). Among the explored compositions, the highest concentrations (20 and 25 mol kg(-1)) exhibit good room temperature conductivity values (55.6 and 31 mS cm(-1), respectively) and a large electrochemical potential window (above 2.5 V).

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