Anhydrous
Proton Conducting Polymer Electrolyte Membranes via Polymerization-Induced
Microphase Separation
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Abstract
Solid-state polymer
electrolyte membranes (PEMs) exhibiting high ionic conductivity coupled
with mechanical robustness and high thermal stability are vital for
the design of next-generation lithium-ion batteries and high-temperature
fuel cells. We present the in situ preparation of nanostructured PEMs
incorporating a protic ionic liquid (IL) into one of the domains of
a microphase-separated block copolymer created via polymerization-induced
microphase separation. This facile, one-pot synthetic strategy transforms
a homogeneous liquid precursor consisting of a poly(ethylene oxide)
(PEO) macro-chain-transfer agent, styrene and divinylbenzene monomers,
and protic IL into a robust and transparent monolith. The resulting
PEMs exhibit a bicontinuous morphology comprising PEO/protic IL conducting
pathways and highly cross-linked polystyrene (PS) domains. The cross-linked
PS mechanical scaffold imparts thermal and mechanical stability to
the PEMs, with an elastic modulus approaching 10 MPa at 180 °C,
without sacrificing the ionic conductivity of the system. Crucially,
the long-range continuity of the PEO/protic IL conducting nanochannels
results in an outstanding ionic conductivity of 14 mS/cm at 180 °C.
We posit that proton conduction in the protic IL occurs via the vehicular
mechanism and the PEMs exhibit an average proton transference number
of 0.7. This approach is very promising for the development of high-temperature,
robust PEMs with excellent proton conductivities