August 6, 2020
Journal Article

Role of Solvent Rearrangement on Mg2+ Solvation Structures in Dimethoxyethane Solutions Using Multimodal NMR Analysis

Abstract

One of the main impediments faced for predicting important emergent properties of a multivalent electrolyte (such as conductivity and electrochemical stability) is the lack of quantitative analysis of ion-ion and ion-solvent interactions, which manifest in solvation structures and dynamics. In particular, the role of ion-solvent interactions is still unclear in cases where the strong electric field from multivalent cations can influence structural evolution of lower permittivity organic solvent molecules on solvation structure. These influences are commonly refered to as electrostriction pheonmena. Using quantitative 1H, 19F, 17O, and 25Mg NMR together with 19F nuclear spin relaxation and diffusion measurments, we find an unusual correlation between ion concentration and solvation structure of Mg(TFSI)2 salt in dimethoxyethane (DME) solution. The domiant solvation structure evolves from contact ion pairs (i.e. [Mg(TFSI)(DME)1-2]+) to fully solvated clusters (i.e. [Mg(DME)3]2+) as salt concentration increases or as temperature decreases. This transition is coupled to a phase separation, which we study here between 0.06 M and 0.36 M. Subsequent analysis is based on an explanation of the electrostriction phenomena and the competion between solvent molecules and TFSI anions for cation coordination.

Revised: September 29, 2020 | Published: August 6, 2020

Citation

Chen Y., N.R. Jaegers, H. Wang, K. Han, J.Z. Hu, K.T. Mueller, and V. Murugesan. 2020. Role of Solvent Rearrangement on Mg2+ Solvation Structures in Dimethoxyethane Solutions Using Multimodal NMR Analysis. The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 11, no. 15:6443-6449. PNNL-SA-153110. doi:10.1021/acs.jpclett.0c01447