The performance of
electrochemical devices using ionic liquids
(ILs) as electrolytes can be impaired by water uptake. This work investigates
the influence of water on the behavior of hydrophilic and hydrophobic
ILswith ethylsulfate and tris(perfluoroalkyl)trifluorophosphate
or bis(trifluoromethyl sulfonyl)imide (TFSI) anions, respectivelyon
electrified graphene, a promising electrode material. The results
show that water uptake slightly reduces the IL electrochemical stability
and significantly influences graphene’s potential of zero charge,
which is justified by the extent of anion depletion from the surface.
Experiments confirm the dominant contribution of graphene’s
quantum capacitance (C
Q
) to the total interfacial capacitance (C
int
) near the PZC, as expected from theory. Combining
theory and experiments reveals that the hydrophilic IL efficiently
screens surface charge and exhibits the largest double layer capacitance
(C
IL
∼ 80 μF
cm–2), so that C
Q
governs the charge stored. The hydrophobic ILs are less efficient
in charge screening and thus exhibit a smaller capacitance (C
IL
∼ 6–9 μF
cm–2), which governs C
int
already at small potentials. An increase in the
total interfacial capacitance is observed at positive voltages for
humid TFSI-ILs relative to dry ones, consistent with the presence
of a satellite peak. Short-range surface forces reveal the change
of the interfacial layering with potential and water uptake owing
to reorientation of counterions, counterion binding, co-ion repulsion,
and water enrichment. These results are consistent with the charge
being mainly stored in a ∼2 nm-thick double layer, which implies
that ILs behave as highly concentrated electrolytes. This knowledge
will advance the design of IL-graphene-based electrochemical devices.
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