Login / Signup

Effect of ZnO Nanofiller on Structural and Electrochemical Performance Improvement of Solid Polymer Electrolytes Based on Polyvinyl Alcohol-Cellulose Acetate-Potassium Carbonate Composites.

John Ojur DennisMohammed Khalil Mohammed AliKhalid Hassan IbnaoufOsama AldaghriNaglaa F M Abdel AllAbdullahi Abbas AdamFahad UsmanYarima Mudassir HassanBashir Abubakar Abdulkadir
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
In this study, a solution casting method was used to prepare solid polymer electrolytes (SPEs) based on a polymer blend comprising polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), cellulose acetate (CA), and potassium carbonate (K 2 CO 3 ) as a conducting salt, and zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO-NPs) as a nanofiller. The prepared electrolytes were physicochemically and electrochemically characterized, and their semi-crystalline nature was established using XRD and FESEM. The addition of ZnO to the polymer-salt combination resulted in a substantial increase in ionic conductivity, which was investigated using impedance analysis. The size of the semicircles in the Cole-Cole plots shrank as the amount of nanofiller increased, showing a decrease in bulk resistance that might be ascribed to an increase in ions due to the strong action of the ZnO-NPs. The sample with 10 wt % ZnO-NPs was found to produce the highest ionic conductivity, potential window, and lowest activation energy ( E a ) of 3.70 × 10 -3 Scm -1 , 3.24 V, and 6.08 × 10 -4 eV, respectively. The temperature-frequency dependence of conductivity was found to approximately follow the Arrhenius model, which established that the electrolytes in this study are thermally activated. Hence, it can be concluded that, based on the improved conductivity observed, SPEs based on a PVA-CA-K 2 CO 3 /ZnO-NPs composite could be applicable in all-solid-state energy storage devices.
Keyphrases