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Published May 2016 | public
Journal Article

Effect of varying the composition and nanostructure of organic carbonate-containing lyotropic liquid crystal polymer electrolytes on their ionic conductivity

Abstract

Nanostructured composite electrolyte films consisting of a cross-linked lyotropic liquid crystal (LLC) monomer, an organic carbonate liquid electrolyte (propylene carbonate, dimethylcarbonate, diethylcarbonate) and a Li salt (LiClO_4, LiBF_4, LiPF_6) were systematically prepared and characterized at two electrolyte concentrations (0.245 and 1.0 m) and four liquid loading levels (5, 15, 30, 50 wt %). The LLC morphology of the films was investigated using polarized light microscopy and powder X-ray diffraction; their ionic conductivity was investigated using AC impedance measurements. Higher liquid electrolyte loadings and Li salt concentrations generally increased ionic conductivity, regardless of the liquid electrolyte or salt used. Some mixed-phase LLC morphologies displayed good ionic conductivity; however, as initially prepared, these formulations were at the limit of liquid uptake. In contrast, composites with a type II bicontinuous cubic (QII) LLC phase containing ordered, three-dimensional interconnected nanopores exhibited good conductivity using much less liquid electrolyte and a lower Li salt concentration, indicating that this structure is more amenable to ion transport than less ordered/uniform morphologies. When wetted with electrolyte solution and integrated into Li/fluorinated carbon coin cells, the QII films were sufficiently strong to act as an ion-conductive separator and displayed stable open-circuit potentials. Many of the mixed-phase films gave shorted cells.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Society of Polymer Science, Japan (SPSJ). Received 3 October 2015; Revised 17 November 2015; Accepted 21 November 2015. Advance online publication 27 January 2016. This work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy via an STTR Grant to TDA Research with a subcontract to CU Boulder (DE-FG02-04ER84093) and the NSF Liquid Crystal Materials Research Center at CU Boulder (DMR-0820579).

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023