Artigo Revisado por pares

Mixed-Salt Effects on the Ionic Conductivity of Lithium-Doped PEO-Containing Block Copolymers

2011; American Chemical Society; Volume: 44; Issue: 20 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/ma2013157

ISSN

1520-5835

Autores

Wen‐Shiue Young, Julie Albert, A. Benjamin Schantz, Thomas H. Epps,

Tópico(s)

Conducting polymers and applications

Resumo

We demonstrate a simple, yet effective, mixed-salt method to increase the room temperature ionic conductivity of lithium-doped block copolymer electrolyte membranes by suppressing the crystalline phases in the conducting block. We examined a mixed-salt system of LiClO4 and LiN(SO2CF3)2 (LiTFSI) doped into a lamellae-forming poly(styrene-b-ethylene oxide) (PS–PEO) diblock copolymer. The domain spacings, morphologies, thermal behavior, and crystalline phases of salt-doped PS–PEO samples were characterized, and the ionic conductivities of block copolymer electrolytes were obtained through ac impedance measurements. Comparing the ionic conductivity profiles of salt-doped PS–PEO samples at different mixed-salt ratios and total salt concentrations, we found that the ionic conductivity at room temperature can be improved by more than an order of magnitude when coinhibition of crystallite growth is promoted by the concerted behavior of the PEO:LiClO4 and PEO:LiTFSI phases. Additionally, we examined the influence of mixed-salt ratio and total salt concentration on copolymer energetics, and we found that the slope of the effective interaction parameter (χeff) vs salt concentration in our lamellae-forming PS–PEO system was lower than that reported for a cylinder-forming PS–PEO system due to the balance between chain stretching and salt segregation in the PEO domains.

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