Quantifying the effects of intra-domain structure and dynamics on ion transport in nanostructured block polymer electrolytes
ORAL
Abstract
Nanostructured block polymer electrolytes can boost the performance and safety of lithium-ion batteries relative to liquid electrolytes. However, the presence of interfaces between microphase-separated domains can introduce complexities in the local ion transport, as competing effects (e.g., interfacial segmental mixing vs. chain stretching) can increase or decrease local mobility. We present a quantitative framework to account for the effects of polymer architecture, segmental mixing, chain stretching, and confinement on the dynamics of polystyrene‑block‑poly(oligo-oxyethylene methacrylate) (PS-b-POEM) electrolytes, and we validate this framework through nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements on solid‑state electrolyte samples. Notably, we found that a mobility-onset temperature that captures the heterogeneous dynamics along the POEM side chain is a better predictor of segmental mobility than the POEM thermal glass transition temperature. Additionally, our framework explains the mobility gradient across a domain when we combine segmental mixing effects with chain stretching and confinement information, especially at the higher segregation strengths. This quantitative link between local and global dynamics can facilitate the design of next‑generation electrolytes.
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Presenters
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Thomas H Epps
University of Delaware
Authors
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Thomas H Epps
University of Delaware