posted on 2014-08-12, 00:00authored byMahati Chintapalli, X. Chelsea Chen, Jacob L. Thelen, Alexander
A. Teran, Xin Wang, Bruce A. Garetz, Nitash P. Balsara
A systematic
study of the dependence of ionic conductivity on the
grain size of a lamellar block copolymer electrolyte was performed.
A freeze-dried mixture of poly(styrene)-block-poly(ethylene
oxide) and lithium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide salt was heated
in steps from 29 to 116 °C and then cooled back to 29 °C
with an annealing time ranging from 30 to 60 min at each temperature.
Grain structure and ionic conductivity during these steps were quantified
by in situ small-angle X-ray scattering and ac impedance
spectroscopy, respectively. Conductivity depends both on grain structure
and temperature. A normalization scheme to decouple the dependence
of conductivity on temperature and grain structure is described. Ionic
conductivity at a given temperature was found to decrease by a factor
of 5.2 ± 0.9 as the SAXS measure of grain size increased from
13 to 88 nm. The fact that in the system studied, large, well-formed
lamellar grains are less conducting than poorly defined, small grains
suggests a new approach for optimizing the transport properties of
block copolymer electrolytes. Further work is necessary to confirm
the generality of this finding.