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Ion correlation and negative lithium transference in polyelectrolyte solutions.

Helen K BergstromKara D FongDavid M HalatCarl A KaroutaHasan C CelikJeffrey A ReimerBryan D McCloskey
Published in: Chemical science (2023)
Polyelectrolyte solutions (PESs) recently have been proposed as high conductivity, high lithium transference number ( t + ) electrolytes where the majority of the ionic current is carried by the electrochemically active Li-ion. While PESs are intuitively appealing because anchoring the anion to a polymer backbone selectively slows down anionic motion and therefore increases t + , increasing the anion charge will act as a competing effect, decreasing t + . In this work we directly measure ion mobilities in a model non-aqueous polyelectrolyte solution using electrophoretic Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (eNMR) to probe these competing effects. While previous studies that rely on ideal assumptions predict that PESs will have higher t + than monomeric solutions, we demonstrate that below the entanglement limit, both conductivity and t + decrease with increasing degree of polymerization. For polyanions of 10 or more repeat units, at 0.5 m Li + we directly observe Li + move in the "wrong direction" in an electric field, evidence of a negative transference number due to correlated motion through ion clustering. This is the first experimental observation of negative transference in a non-aqueous polyelectrolyte solution. We also demonstrate that t + increases with increasing Li + concentration. Using Onsager transport coefficients calculated from experimental data, and insights from previously published molecular dynamics studies we demonstrate that despite selectively slowing anion motion using polyanions, distinct anion-anion correlation through the polymer backbone and cation-anion correlation through ion aggregates reduce the t + in non-entangled PESs. This leads us to conclude that short-chained polyelectrolyte solutions are not viable high transference number electrolytes. These results emphasize the importance of understanding the effects of ion-correlations when designing new concentrated electrolytes for improved battery performance.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • solid state
  • molecular dynamics
  • ion batteries
  • density functional theory
  • high speed
  • randomized controlled trial
  • single cell
  • case control
  • meta analyses
  • deep learning