Trivalent ion overcharging on electrified graphene (2111.10516v2)
Abstract: The structure of the electrical double layer (EDL) formed near graphene in aqueous environments strongly impacts its performance for a plethora of applications, including capacitive deionization. In particular, adsorption and organization of multivalent counterions near the graphene interface can promote nonclassical behaviors of EDL including overcharging followed by co-ion adsorption. In this paper, we characterize the EDL formed near an electrified graphene interface in dilute aqueous $YCl_3$ solution using in situ high resolution x-ray reflectivity (also known as crystal truncation rod (CTR)) and resonant anomalous x-ray reflectivity (RAXR). These interfacial-specific techniques reveal the electron density profiles with molecular-scale resolution. We find that yttrium ions ($Y{3+}$) readily adsorb to the negatively charged graphene surface to form an extended ion profile. This ion distribution resembles a classical diffuse layer but with a significantly high ion coverage, i.e., 1 $Y{3+}$ per 11.4 $\pm$ 1.6 A$2$, compared to the value calculated from the capacitance measured by cyclic voltammetry (1 $Y{3+}$ per ~240 A$2$). Such overcharging can be explained by co-adsorption of chloride that effectively screens the excess positive charge. The adsorbed $Y{3+}$ profile also shows a molecular-scale gap ($\geq$5 A) from the top graphene surfaces, which is attributed to the presence of intervening water molecules between the adsorbents and adsorbates as well as the lack of inner-sphere surface complexation on chemically inert graphene. We also demonstrate controlled adsorption by varying the applied potential and reveal consistent $Y{3+}$ ion position with respect to the surface and increasing cation coverage with decreasing applied potential.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.