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Abstract
Water-containing layered materials have found various applications such as water purification and energy storage. The highly structured water molecules around ions under the confinement between the layers determine the ion storage ability. Yet, the relationship between the configuration of interlayer ions and water structure in high ion storage layered materials is elusive. Herein, using layered double hydroxides, we demonstrate that the water structure is sensitive to the filling density of ions in the interlayer space and governs the ion storage. For ion storage of dilute nitrate ions, a 24% decrease in the filling density increases the nitrate storage capacity by 300%. Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring studies, combined with multimodal ex situ experiments and theoretical calculations, reveal that the decreasing filling density effectively facilitates the 2D hydrogen-bond networking structure in water around interlayer nitrate ions along with minimal change in the layered structure, leading to the high storage capacity.
Structured water is ubiquitous but not fully understood in confinement. Here authors show that the structure of water is sensitive to the configuration of ions in the nanoconfinement and governs ion storage in layered materials.
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1 Shinshu University, Research Initiative for Supra-Materials (RISM), Nagano, Japan (GRID:grid.263518.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 1507 4692)
2 Shinshu University, Department of Materials Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Nagano, Japan (GRID:grid.263518.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 1507 4692)
3 Shinshu University, Research Initiative for Supra-Materials (RISM), Nagano, Japan (GRID:grid.263518.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 1507 4692); Shinshu University, Department of Materials Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Nagano, Japan (GRID:grid.263518.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 1507 4692)