On the Structure–Conductivity Relationship of Confined PEO/LiTFSI Electrolytes
ORAL
Abstract
Emerging 3D solid–state batteries comprise polymer electrolytes filled into high–surface area porous scaffolds, underscoring the importance of polymers under confinement. Here, we report on the structure–conductivity relationship of poly(ethylene oxide)–lithium trifluoromethanesulfonylimide complexes confined to microporous scaffolds at various salt concentrations (Li+:ether oxygen ratio (r) = 0.0125, 0.0167, 0.025, 0.05). From thermal analysis and X–ray scattering, we observe that confinement suppresses polymer crystallinity relative to the bulk, whereas the glass transition temperature remains unaffected. Further from dielectric spectroscopy, we observe that confinement enhances ionic conductivity in dilute electrolytes (r ~ 0.0167) at 298 K, but not in concentrated electrolytes (r ~ 0.05). At 350 K (melt), all confined electrolytes are less ionically conductive than the bulk due to scaffold–ion interactions as evidenced by time–of–flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF–SIMS). In summary, our findings indicate that polymer crystallinity, interfacial ion segregation, and tortuosity all play important roles in determining total ionic conductivity and, ultimately, the emergence of 3D SPEs as energy storage materials.
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Publication: The Effect of Confinement on the Structure–Conductivity Relationship in PEO/LiTFSI Electrolytes in 3D Microporous Scaffolds. ACS Macro Letters 2024. Accepted
Presenters
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SHREYAS PATHREEKER
University of Pennsylvania
Authors
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SHREYAS PATHREEKER
University of Pennsylvania
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Hyeongjun Koh
University of Pennsylvania
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Weiwei Kong
University of Pennsylvania
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Richard Robinson
Xerion Advanced Battery Corporation
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Gillian Weissman
Xerion Advanced Battery Corporation
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Eric Stach
University of Pennsylvania
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Eric Detsi
University of Pennsylvania
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Russell John Composto
University of Pennsylvania