Nanoscale capillary freezing of ionic liquids confined between metallic interfaces and the role of electronic screening
Jean Comtet, Antoine Nigu\`es, Vojtech Kaiser, Lyderic Bocquet,, Alessandro Siria

TL;DR
This study investigates how ionic liquids confined between metallic surfaces undergo a phase transition to a solid-like state at nanoscales, influenced by electronic screening effects, with implications for energy storage and lubrication.
Contribution
It reveals the role of electronic screening in capillary freezing of ionic liquids confined between metallic interfaces, combining experimental AFM measurements with theoretical modeling.
Findings
Capillary freezing occurs below a critical thickness in ionic liquids.
More metallic surfaces promote the freezing transition.
Electronic screening influences wetting and phase behavior of confined ionic liquids.
Abstract
Room temperature Ionic liquids (RTIL) received considerable attention as a new class of materials with fundamental importance for energy storage \cite{Armand2009, Uesugi2013} and active lubrication \cite{Palacio2010, Dold2015, Smith2013a}. Their unique properties result from the competition of strong electrostatic interactions with properly designed molecular structure to avoid crystalization at room temperature. They are however unsual liquids, which challenge fundamentally the classical frameworks of electrolytes. In particular their behavior at electrified interfaces remains elusive with very rich and exotic responses relevant to their electrochemical activity \cite{Kornyshev2014,Merlet2012,Perkin2013,Atkin2009,Rotenberg2015,Endres2012,Bovio2009a,Bovio2009,Yokota2010}. In this work, we use quartz tuning fork based AFM nanorheological measurements to explore the properties of RTIL in…
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