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Solvation Dynamics in a Prototypical Ionic Liquid + Dipolar Aprotic Liquid Mixture: 1-Butyl-3-methylimidazolium Tetrafluoroborate + Acetonitrile
73
Citations
60
References
2014
Year
Deep Eutectic SolventSolvation DynamicsSolid-state IonicChemical ThermodynamicsEngineeringSimple LiquidPhysicochemical AnalysisIonic ConductorPhysical ChemistryOrganic ChemistrySolvation Response FunctionsChemistryMolecular KineticsSolvation EnergiesSolution (Chemistry)BiophysicsRotation Times
Solvation energies, rotation times, and 100 fs to 20 ns solvation response functions of the solute coumarin 153 (C153) in mixtures of 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate ([Im41][BF4]) + acetonitrile (CH3CN) at room temperature (20.5 °C) are reported. Available density, shear viscosity, and electrical conductivity data at 25 °C are also collected and parametrized, and new data on refractive indices and component diffusion coefficients presented. Solvation free energies and reorganization energies associated with the S0 ↔ S1 transition of C153 are slightly (≤15%) larger in neat [Im41][BF4] than in CH3CN. No clear evidence for preferential solvation of C153 in these mixtures is found. Composition-dependent diffusion coefficients (D) of Im41(+) and CH3CN as well as C153 rotation times (τ) are approximately related to solution viscosity (η) as D, τ ∝ η(p) with values of p = -0.88, -0.77, and +0.90, respectively. Spectral/solvation response functions (Sν(t)) are bimodal at all compositions, consisting of a subpicosecond fast component followed by a broadly distributed slower component extending over ps-ns times. Integral solvation times (⟨τ(solv)⟩ = ∫(0)(∞)Sν(t) dt) follow a power law on viscosity for mixturecompositions 0.2 ≤ x(IL) ≤ 1 with p = 0.79. With recent broad-band dielectric measurements [J. Phys. Chem. B 2012, 116, 7509] asinput, a simple dielectric continuum model provides predictions for solvation response functions that correctly capture thedistinctive bimodal character of the observed response. At x(IL) ∼ 1 predicted values of ⟨τ(solv)⟩ are smaller than those observed by a factor of 2-3, but the two become approximately equal at x(IL) = 0.2. Predictions of a recent semimolecular theory [J. Phys. Chem. B 2011, 115, 4011] are less accurate, being uniformly slower than the observed solvation dynamics.
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