Evolution of microscopic heterogeneity and dynamics in choline chloride- based deep eutectic solvents
S Spittle and D Poe and B Doherty and C Kolodziej and L Heroux and MA Haque and H Squire and T Cosby and Y Zhang and C Fraenza and S Bhattacharyya and M Tyagi and J Peng and RA Elgammal and T Zawodzinski and M Tuckerman and S Greenbaum and B Gurkan and M Dadmun and EJ Maginn and J Sangoro, NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 13, 219 (2022).
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-27842-z
Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are an emerging class of non-aqueous solvents that are potentially scalable, easy to prepare and functionalize for many applications ranging from biomass processing to energy storage technologies. Predictive understanding of the fundamental correlations between local structure and macroscopic properties is needed to exploit the large design space and tunability of DESs for specific applications. Here, we employ a range of computational and experimental techniques that span length-scales from molecular to macroscopic and timescales from picoseconds to seconds to study the evolution of structure and dynamics in model DESs, namely Glyceline and Ethaline, starting from the parent compounds. We show that systematic addition of choline chloride leads to microscopic heterogeneities that alter the primary structural relaxation in glycerol and ethylene glycol and result in new dynamic modes that are strongly correlated to the macroscopic properties of the DES formed. Tailoring the macroscopic properties of deep eutectic solvents requires knowing how these depend on the local structure and microscopic dynamics. The authors, with computational and experimental tools spanning a wide range of space- and timescales, shed light into the relationship between micro and macroscopic properties in glyceline and ethaline.
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