volume 125 issue 24 pages 6359-6372

A Brief Guide to the Structure of High-Temperature Molten Salts and Key Aspects Making Them Different from Their Low-Temperature Relatives, the Ionic Liquids

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-05-28
scimago Q1
wos Q3
SJR0.742
CiteScore5.3
Impact factor2.9
ISSN15206106, 15205207, 10895647
Materials Chemistry
Surfaces, Coatings and Films
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Abstract
High-temperature molten salt research is undergoing somewhat of a renaissance these days due to the apparent advantage of these systems in areas related to clean and sustainable energy harvesting and transfer. In many ways, this is a mature field with decades if not already a century of outstanding work devoted to it. Yet, much of this work was done with pioneering experimental and computational setups that lack the current day capabilities of synchrotrons and high-performance-computing systems resulting in deeply entrenched results in the literature that when carefully inspected may require revision. Yet, in other cases, access to isotopically substituted ions make those pioneering studies very unique and prohibitively expensive to carry out nowadays. There are many review articles on molten salts, some of them cited in this perspective, that are simply outstanding and we dare not try to outdo those. Instead, having worked for almost a couple of decades already on their low-temperature relatives, the ionic liquids, this is the perspective article that some of the authors would have wanted to read when embarking on their research journey on high-temperature molten salts. We hope that this will serve as a simple guide to those expanding from research on ionic liquids to molten salts and vice versa, particularly, when looking into their bulk structural features. The article does not aim at being comprehensive but instead focuses on selected topics such as short- and intermediate-range order, the constraints on force field requirements, and other details that make the high- and low-temperature ionic melts in some ways similar but in others diametrically opposite.
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Sharma S., Ivanov A., Margulis C. J. A Brief Guide to the Structure of High-Temperature Molten Salts and Key Aspects Making Them Different from Their Low-Temperature Relatives, the Ionic Liquids // Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 2021. Vol. 125. No. 24. pp. 6359-6372.
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Sharma S., Ivanov A., Margulis C. J. A Brief Guide to the Structure of High-Temperature Molten Salts and Key Aspects Making Them Different from Their Low-Temperature Relatives, the Ionic Liquids // Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 2021. Vol. 125. No. 24. pp. 6359-6372.
RIS |
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01065
UR - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01065
TI - A Brief Guide to the Structure of High-Temperature Molten Salts and Key Aspects Making Them Different from Their Low-Temperature Relatives, the Ionic Liquids
T2 - Journal of Physical Chemistry B
AU - Sharma, Shobha
AU - Ivanov, Alex
AU - Margulis, Claudio J.
PY - 2021
DA - 2021/05/28
PB - American Chemical Society (ACS)
SP - 6359-6372
IS - 24
VL - 125
PMID - 34048657
SN - 1520-6106
SN - 1520-5207
SN - 1089-5647
ER -
BibTex |
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2021_Sharma,
author = {Shobha Sharma and Alex Ivanov and Claudio J. Margulis},
title = {A Brief Guide to the Structure of High-Temperature Molten Salts and Key Aspects Making Them Different from Their Low-Temperature Relatives, the Ionic Liquids},
journal = {Journal of Physical Chemistry B},
year = {2021},
volume = {125},
publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)},
month = {may},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01065},
number = {24},
pages = {6359--6372},
doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01065}
}
MLA
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Sharma, Shobha, et al. “A Brief Guide to the Structure of High-Temperature Molten Salts and Key Aspects Making Them Different from Their Low-Temperature Relatives, the Ionic Liquids.” Journal of Physical Chemistry B, vol. 125, no. 24, May. 2021, pp. 6359-6372. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c01065.