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      Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Ionic Liquids and Electrolytes Using Polarizable Force Fields

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          Abstract

          Many applications in chemistry, biology, and energy storage/conversion research rely on molecular simulations to provide fundamental insight into structural and transport properties of materials with high ionic concentrations. Whether the system is comprised entirely of ions, like ionic liquids, or is a mixture of a polar solvent with a salt, e.g., liquid electrolytes for battery applications, the presence of ions in these materials results in strong local electric fields polarizing solvent molecules and large ions. To predict properties of such systems from molecular simulations often requires either explicit or mean-field inclusion of the influence of polarization on electrostatic interactions. In this manuscript, we review the pros and cons of different treatments of polarization ranging from the mean-field approaches to the most popular explicit polarization models in molecular dynamics simulations of ionic materials. For each method, we discuss their advantages and disadvantages and emphasize key assumptions as well as their adjustable parameters. Strategies for the development of polarizable models are presented with a specific focus on extracting atomic polarizabilities. Finally, we compare simulations using polarizable and nonpolarizable models for several classes of ionic systems, discussing the underlying physics that each approach includes or ignores, implications for implementation and computational efficiency, and the accuracy of properties predicted by these methods compared to experiments.

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          "Water-in-salt" electrolyte enables high-voltage aqueous lithium-ion chemistries.

          Lithium-ion batteries raise safety, environmental, and cost concerns, which mostly arise from their nonaqueous electrolytes. The use of aqueous alternatives is limited by their narrow electrochemical stability window (1.23 volts), which sets an intrinsic limit on the practical voltage and energy output. We report a highly concentrated aqueous electrolyte whose window was expanded to ~3.0 volts with the formation of an electrode-electrolyte interphase. A full lithium-ion battery of 2.3 volts using such an aqueous electrolyte was demonstrated to cycle up to 1000 times, with nearly 100% coulombic efficiency at both low (0.15 coulomb) and high (4.5 coulombs) discharge and charge rates.
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            Ionic-liquid materials for the electrochemical challenges of the future.

            Ionic liquids are room-temperature molten salts, composed mostly of organic ions that may undergo almost unlimited structural variations. This review covers the newest aspects of ionic liquids in applications where their ion conductivity is exploited; as electrochemical solvents for metal/semiconductor electrodeposition, and as batteries and fuel cells where conventional media, organic solvents (in batteries) or water (in polymer-electrolyte-membrane fuel cells), fail. Biology and biomimetic processes in ionic liquids are also discussed. In these decidedly different materials, some enzymes show activity that is not exhibited in more traditional systems, creating huge potential for bioinspired catalysis and biofuel cells. Our goal in this review is to survey the recent key developments and issues within ionic-liquid research in these areas. As well as informing materials scientists, we hope to generate interest in the wider community and encourage others to make use of ionic liquids in tackling scientific challenges.
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              ReaxFF:  A Reactive Force Field for Hydrocarbons

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Chem Rev
                Chem. Rev
                cr
                chreay
                Chemical Reviews
                American Chemical Society
                0009-2665
                1520-6890
                29 May 2019
                10 July 2019
                : 119
                : 13
                : 7940-7995
                Affiliations
                []Department of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Utah , 122 South Central Campus Drive, Room 304, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, United States
                []Laboratoire de Chimie Théorique, Sorbonne Université, UMR 7616 CNRS, CC137 , 4 Place Jussieu, Tour 12-13, 4ème étage, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France
                [§ ]Institut Universitaire de France , 75005, Paris Cedex 05, France
                []Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin , Austin, Texas 78712, United States
                []Electrochemistry Branch, Sensors and Electron Devices Directorate, Army Research Laboratory , 2800 Powder Mill Road, Adelphi, Maryland 20703, United States
                [# ]Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, University of Maryland , 20 Penn Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201, United States
                []Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Gordon Center for Integrative Science, University of Chicago , 929 57th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, United States
                []Department of Computational Biological Chemistry, University of Vienna , Währinger Strasse 17, A-1090 Vienna, Austria
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acs.chemrev.8b00763
                6620131
                31141351
                7b3a8e0e-2130-4323-b736-2797df7eddef
                Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.

                History
                : 11 December 2018
                Categories
                Review
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                cr8b00763

                Chemistry
                Chemistry

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