Water-in-salt electrolytes (WiSEs), which contain salt with extremely high concentration (>20 mol kg-1), are attracting much interest as new electrolytes for energy storage systems, especially for lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), because they are considered to be suitable for developing safer systems. Structural analysis on WiSE/solid interfaces would provide beneficial information for developing LIBs. Whereas the interfacial structures of diluted aqueous electrolytes (less than 1 mol kg-1) have been intensively studied by high-resolution atomic force microscopy (AFM), those of WiSEs have not. In this study, we demonstrated AFM investigations on WiSE/mica interfaces, where FM-AFM utilizing a quartz tuning fork sensor was used. We studied the surface topography on atomic resolution and the interfacial solvation structure by frequency shift (Δf)-distance curve measurement and two-dimensional Δf mapping. In addition, we investigated the salt molality dependence of the solvation structure and compared the AFM results with Raman spectra.
CITATION STYLE
Ichii, T., Ichikawa, S., Yamada, Y., Murata, M., Utsunomiya, T., & Sugimura, H. (2020). Solvation structure on water-in-salt/mica interfaces and its molality dependence investigated by atomic force microscopy. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, 59. https://doi.org/10.35848/1347-4065/ab80a6
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