Analytical Sciences
Online ISSN : 1348-2246
Print ISSN : 0910-6340
ISSN-L : 0910-6340
Original Papers
Voltammetry of Ion Transfer across the Electrochemically Polarized Micro Liquid-Liquid Interface between Water and a Room-temperature Ionic Liquid, Tetrahexylammonium Bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide, Using a Glass Capillary Micropipette
Norihiro TSUJIOKASeiichi IMAKURANaoya NISHITakashi KAKIUCHI
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2006 Volume 22 Issue 5 Pages 667-671

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Abstract
Ion transfer across the polarized interface between a room-temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) or room-temperature molten salt, tetrahexylammonium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (THAC1C1N), and water has been studied voltammetrically using a micro liquid-liquid interface formed at the orifice of a glass capillary micropipette. A small current of nanoampere level circumvents the problem of the iR drop in the viscous ionic liquid phase. Voltammograms for the transfer of moderately hydrophilic ions, such as BF4- and ClO4-, from the aqueous phase in the capillary to the bulk of THAC1C1N in which the capillary is submerged, show steady-state characteristics in that the current does not depend on the scan rate up to a few hundred millivolt per second, and the plateau in the limiting current region is proportional to the bulk concentration of analyte ions. Owing to the steady-state current, which is presumably ascribed to a noncylindrical geometry of the capillary tip, the relative magnitude of the hydrophobicity, or the affnity to the RTIL, of a series of ions can be determined from the half-wave potentials of voltammograms.
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© 2006 by The Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry
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