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Improved Mechanical Strength without Sacrificing Li-Ion Transport in Polymer Electrolytes.

James T BamfordSeamus D JonesNicole S SchauserBenjamin J PedrettiLeo W GordonNathaniel A LyndRaphaële J ClémentRachel A Segalman
Published in: ACS macro letters (2024)
Next-generation batteries demand solid polymer electrolytes (SPEs) with rapid ion transport and robust mechanical properties. However, many SPEs with liquid-like Li + transport mechanisms suffer a fundamental trade-off between conductivity and strength. Dynamic polymer networks can improve bulk mechanics with minimal impact to segmental relaxation or ionic conductivity. This study demonstrates a system where a single polymer-bound ligand simultaneously dissociates Li + and forms long-lived Ni 2+ networks. The polymer comprises an ethylene oxide backbone and imidazole (Im) ligands, blended with Li + and Ni 2+ salts. Ni 2+ -Im dynamic cross-links result in the formation of a rubbery plateau resulting in, consequently, storage modulus improvement by a factor of 133× with the introduction of Ni 2+ at r Ni = 0.08, from 0.014 to 1.907 MPa. Even with Ni 2+ loading, the high Li + conductivity of 3.7 × 10 -6 S/cm is retained at 90 °C. This work demonstrates that decoupling of ion transport and bulk mechanics can be readily achieved by the addition of multivalent metal cations to polymers with chelating ligands.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • solid state
  • ionic liquid
  • metal organic framework
  • transition metal