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Organic ionic plastic crystals (OIPCs) are emerging as promising electrolyte materials for solid-state batteries. However, despite the fast ionic diffusion, OIPCs exhibit relatively low DC conductivity in solid phases caused by strong ion-ion correlations that suppress charge transport. To understand the origin of this suppression, we performed a study of ion dynamics in the OIPC 1-Ethyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium bis (trifluoromethyl sulfonyl) imide [P12][TFSI] utilizing dielectric spectroscopy, light scattering, and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance diffusometry. Comparison of the results obtained in this study with the published earlier results on an OIPC with a completely different structure (Diethyl(methyl)(isobutyl)phosphonium Hexafluorophosphate [P1,2,2,4][PF6]) revealed strong similarities in ion dynamics in both systems. Unlike DC conductivity, which may drop more than ten times between melted and solid phases, diffusion of anions and cations remains high and does not show strong changes at phase transition. The conductivity spectra in the broad frequency range demonstrate unusual shapes in solid phases with an additional step separating fast local ion motions from suppressed long-range charge diffusion controlling DC conductivity. We suggested that in solid phases, anions and cations can jump only between the specific ion sites defined by the crystalline structure. These constraints lead to strong cation-cation and anion-anion correlations strongly suppressing long-range charge transport.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 28, 2026
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Praseodymium in the +5 oxidation state is a long-sought connection between lanthanide, early-transition and actinide metal redox chemistries. Unique among the lanthanide series, evidence for molecular pentavalent praseodymium species has been observed in the gas phase and noble gas matrix isolation conditions. Here we report the low-temperature synthesis and characterization of a molecular praseodymium complex in the formal +5 oxidation state, [Pr5+(NPtBu3)4][X−] (where tBu = tert-butyl and X− = tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl)borate or hexafluorophosphate). Single-crystal X-ray diffraction, solution-state spectroscopic, solution magnetometric, density functional theory and multireference wavefunction-based methods indicate a highly multiconfigurational singlet ground state. An inverted ligand field drives this unique electronic structure, which establishes a critical link in understanding the bonding of high-valent metal complexes across the periodic table.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 7, 2026
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Abstract The transport of protons is critical in a variety of bio- and electro-chemical processes and technologies. The Grotthuss mechanism is considered to be the most efficient proton transport mechanism, generally implying a transfer of protons between ‘chains’ of host molecules via elementary reactions within the hydrogen bonds. Although Grotthuss proposed this concept more than 200 years ago, only indirect experimental evidence of the mechanism has been observed. Here we report the first experimental observation of proton transfer between the molecules in pure and 85% aqueous phosphoric acid. Employing dielectric spectroscopy, quasielastic neutron, and light scattering, and ab initio molecular dynamic simulations we determined that protons move by surprisingly short jumps of only ~0.5–0.7 Å, much smaller than the typical ion jump length in ionic liquids. Our analysis confirms the existence of correlations in these proton jumps. However, these correlations actually reduce the conductivity, in contrast to a desirable enhancement, as is usually assumed by a Grotthuss mechanism. Furthermore, our analysis suggests that the expected Grotthuss-like enhancement of conductivity cannot be realized in bulk liquids where ionic correlations always decrease conductivity.more » « less
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Organic ionic plastic crystals (OIPCs) appear as promising materials to replace traditional liquid electrolytes, especially for use in solid state batteries. However, OIPCs show low conductive properties relative to liquid electrolytes, which presents an obstacle for their widespread applications. Recent studies revealed very high ion mobility in solid phases of OIPCs, yet the ionic conductivity is significantly (~100 times) suppressed because of strong ion-ion correlations. To understand the origin of the ion-ion correlations in OIPCs, we employed broadband dielectric spectroscopy, light scattering and NMR diffusion measurements in liquid and solid phases of Hexafluorophosphate - Diethyl(methyl)(isobutyl)phosphonium [PF6][P1,2,2,4]. The results confirmed significant decrease in conductivity of solid phases of this OIPC through ion-ion correlations. Surprisingly, these ionic correlations suppress charge displacement on rather long time scales comparable to the time of ion diffusion on the ~1.5 nm length scale. We ascribe the observed phenomena to momentum conservation in motion of mobile anions and emphasize that microscopic understanding of these correlations might enable design of OIPCs with strongly enhanced ionic conductivity.more » « less
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