Structural supercapacitor electrolytes based on bicontinuous ionic liquid-epoxy resin systems
Journal article, 2013

'Structural electrolytes' retain the desirable mechanical characteristics of structural (epoxy) resins whilst introducing sufficient ionic conductivity to operate as electrolytes in electrochemical devices. Here, a series of ionic liquid-epoxy resin composites were prepared to identify the optimum system microstructure required to achieve a high level of multifunctionality. The ionic conductivity, mechanical properties, thermal stability and morphology of the cured epoxy based structural electrolytes were studied as a function of phase composition for three fully formulated high performance structural epoxy systems. At only 30 wt% of structural resin and 70 wt% of ionic liquid based electrolyte, stiff monolithic plaques with thicknesses of 2-3 mm were obtained with a room temperature ionic conductivity of 0.8 mS cm-1 and a Young's modulus of 0.2 GPa. This promising performance can be attributed to a long characteristic length scale spinodal microstructure, suggesting routes to further optimisation in the future. © 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Author

N. Shirshova

Polymer and Composite Engineering (PaCE) Group

A. Bismarck

Polymer and Composite Engineering (PaCE) Group

S. Carreyette

Cytec Industrial Materials

Q. P. V. Fontana

Cytec Industrial Materials

E. S. Greenhalgh

Imperial College London

Per Jacobsson

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

Patrik Johansson

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

Maciej Jozef Marczewski

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

G. Kalinka

Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing

A. Kucernak

Johan Scheers

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Condensed Matter Physics

M. S. Shaffer

J. H. G. Steinke

M. Wienrich

Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing

Journal of Materials Chemistry A

20507488 (ISSN) 20507496 (eISSN)

Vol. 1 48 15300-15309

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Materials Chemistry

DOI

10.1039/c3ta13163g

More information

Latest update

4/20/2018