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have been made of the force between molecularly smooth mica surfaces immersed in ethylammonium nitrate, which is a molten salt at room temperature, and in mixtures of this salt with water across the concentration range from 10 -4 M to that of the pure salt, which is 11. 2 M. At low concentrations the salt behaves as a typical 1: 1 electrolyte, and we measure an electrical double-layer force whose range decreases with increasing salt concentration. At high concentrations, above about 1 M, the double-layer force becomes so weak and short-ranged that it is completely dominated by a solvation force extending up to 5 nm. In the pure molten salt the solvation force is an oscillatory function of surface separation comparable to that measured in simple nonpolar liquids. No monotonic component of solvation force is found.
Horn et al. (Wed,) studied this question.