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Active H2020 European Commission

The Electrolytic Revolution: Harnessing Coulomb Physics and Soft Matter Chemistry to Design Electrolyte Materials

€2M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Oct 01, 2021
End Date Sep 30, 2026
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101001346
Grant Description

Electrolytes fill our natural environment and are crucial to many areas of modern technology.

Animals and plants are made up of electrolyte and our oceans are enormous reservoirs of electrolyte covering 2/3 of the surface of the Earth.

Energy storage and conversion technologies, such as batteries and fuel cells, incorporate electrolyte as a central and essential ingredient.

Despite this enormous ubiquity and importance of electrolytes, these fluids are often relegated to the ‘background’, considered simply as a solvating environment or conduits for charge transfer, sufficiently well defined by a few general parameters.

Recently, a new perspective has begun to emerge: of electrolytes as a complex, central player: A vast library of different chemistries are being discovered including molecular ions, eutectic mixtures, self-assembling liquid salts, and oligomeric solvents.

This diversity brings an unexplored jungle of nano-architectures and dynamic heterogeneities, relevant across many orders of magnitude in time and space.

The overall vision of the ELECTROLYTE project is to explore and understand molecular interactions in complex and high-concentration electrolytes.

The philosophy and methodology of the project involves drawing on theories and predictions from far-separated disciplines of Coulomb physics, ionic liquid chemistry, soft matter, and the biology of halophiles and electric fish.

From these foundations, a series of hypotheses will be tested through experimental investigations of the structure, dynamics, electrochemical, mechanical and confinement properties of a wide range of electrolytic materials.

This will lead to deep insight into the properties of concentrated electrolytes, and demonstrations of radically new electrolytic materials with properties outside of what is currently possible.

Ultimately, the project will bring new mindsets for understanding and innovating electrolyte materials for future technologies.

All Grantees

The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford

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