New Type of Li Ion Conductor with 3D Interconnected Nanopores via Polymerization of a Liquid Organic Electrolyte-Filled Lyotropic Liquid-Crystal Assembly

A new type of polymer electrolyte material for Li ion transport has been developed. This material is based on a polymerizable lyotropic (i.e., amphiphilic) liquid crystal (1) that forms a type-II bicontinuous cubic (QII) phase with the common liquid electrolyte, propylene carbonate (PC), and its Li...

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Published inJournal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 131; no. 44; pp. 15972 - 15973
Main Authors Kerr, Robert L., Miller, Seth A., Shoemaker, Richard K., Elliott, Brian J., Gin, Douglas L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published WASHINGTON American Chemical Society 11.11.2009
Amer Chemical Soc
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Summary:A new type of polymer electrolyte material for Li ion transport has been developed. This material is based on a polymerizable lyotropic (i.e., amphiphilic) liquid crystal (1) that forms a type-II bicontinuous cubic (QII) phase with the common liquid electrolyte, propylene carbonate (PC), and its Li salt solutions. The resulting cross-linked, solid−liquid nanocomposite has an ordered, three-dimensional interconnected network of phase-separated liquid PC nanochannels and exhibits a room-temperature ion conductivity of 10−4 to 10−3 S cm−1 when formed with 15 wt % 0.245 M LiClO4−PC solution. This value approaches that of conventional gelled poly(ethylene oxide)-based electrolytes blended with larger amounts of higher-concentration Li salt solutions. It is also similar to that of a bulk 0.245 M LiClO4−PC solution measured using the same AC impedance methods. Preliminary variable-temperature ion conductivity and NMR DOSY studies showed that liquidlike diffusion is present in the QII nanochannels and that good ion conductivity (∼10−4 S cm−1) and PC mobility are retained down to −35 °C (and lower). This type of stable, liquidlike ion conductivity over a broad temperature range is typically not exhibited by conventional gelled-polymer- or liquid-crystal-based electrolytes, making this new material potentially valuable for enabling Li ion batteries that can operate more efficiently over a wider temperature range.
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ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja905208f