Ion transport, mechanical properties and relaxation dynamics in structural battery electrolytes consisting of an imidazolium protic ionic liquid confined into a methacrylate polymer
Journal article, 2023

The effect of confining a liquid electrolyte into a polymer matrix was studied by means of Raman spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, temperature-modulated differential scanning calorimetry, dielectric spectroscopy, and rheology. The polymer matrix was obtained from thermal curing ethoxylated bisphenol A dimethacrylate while the liquid electrolyte consisted of a protic ionic liquid based on the ethyl-imidazolium cation [C2HIm] and the bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide [TFSI] anion, doped with LiTFSI salt. We report that the confined liquid phase exhibits the following characteristics: (i) a distinctly reduced degree of crystallinity; (ii) a broader distribution of relaxation times; (iii) reduced dielectric strength; (iv) a reduced cooperativity length scale at the liquid-to-glass transition temperature (Tg); and (v) up-speeded local Tg-related ion dynamics. The latter is indicative of weak interfacial interactions between the two nanophases and a strong geometrical confinement effect, which dictates both the ion dynamics and the coupled structural relaxation, hence lowering Tg by about 4 K. We also find that at room temperature, the ionic conductivity of the structural electrolyte achieves a value of 0.13 mS/cm, one decade lower than the corresponding bulk electrolyte. Three mobile ions (Im+, TFSI-, and Li+) contribute to the measured ionic conductivity, implicitly reducing the Li+ transference number. In addition, we report that the investigated solid polymer electrolytes exhibit the shear modulus needed for transferring the mechanical load to the carbon fibers in a structural battery. Based on these findings, we conclude that optimized microphase-separated polymer electrolytes, including a protic ionic liquid, are promising for the development of
novel multifunctional electrolytes for use in future structural batteries.

ionic conductivity

Structural battery electrolyte

confinement

relaxation dynamics

protic ionic liquid

Author

Achilleas Pipertzis

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Nicole Abdou

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Johanna Xu

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Leif Asp

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Anna Martinelli

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Jan Swenson

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Energy Materials: Materials Science and Engineering for Energy Systems

1748-9237 (ISSN)

Vol. 3 300050

Subject Categories

Polymer Chemistry

Inorganic Chemistry

Physical Chemistry

Materials Chemistry

Condensed Matter Physics

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

Materials Science

Infrastructure

Chalmers Materials Analysis Laboratory

DOI

10.20517/energymater.2023.49

More information

Latest update

1/12/2024