4.7 Article

Ionic Conductivity Enhancement in UHMW PEO Gel Electrolytes Based on Room-Temperature Ionic Liquids and Deep Eutectic Solvents

Journal

ACS APPLIED POLYMER MATERIALS
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 2860-2870

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsapm.2c00104

Keywords

polymer gel electrolytes; Li; deep eutectic solvents; ionic liquids; UHMW PEO; self-healing; energy storage; batteries; ionogel

Funding

  1. EU [H2020-FETOPEN-1-2016-2017 G.A 766581, 951902]

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Physical gels made of poly(ethylene oxide) and deep eutectic solvents show excellent properties, with rheology behaving as expected and ion conductivity and diffusivity higher than those of pure liquid electrolytes, especially at low concentration and high molecular weight PEO.
Physical gels made of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) and deep eutectic solvents urea-Li bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (TFSI) and ethylene glycol/ LiTFSI, or pyrrolidinium ionic liquid solutions PYR13TFSI-LiTFSI and PYR14TFSI-LiTFSI, are prepared by a fast, single-step process, which involves no auxiliary solvents or intermediates and is reproducible and scalable. The properties of these gels are studied as a function of the PEO content and its molecular weight and the nature of the liquid electrolyte. The gels prepared with a low concentration (1-5 wt %) of ultrahigh molecular weight (UHMW) PEO are tough, stretchable materials which resemble soft elastomers and are also self-healing and transparent. Their rheology shows the conventional behavior of physical polymer gels, so that the higher the molecular weight of PEO, the lower the polymer concentration needed to produce the gel. However, the ion conductivities and diffusivities of the gels are striking, in many cases being equal to or significantly higher than those of pure liquid electrolytes. This ion conductivity enhancement is the highest for the lowest PEO concentration with the highest molecular weight. This unprecedented molecular weight dependence of conductivity and diffusivity is the result of two combined effects: the liquid electrolyte chemical structure modification as a consequence of the addition of PEO and the development of elastic networks, where ion mobility and rheology are uncoupled when the PEO added is of UHMW.

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