posted on 2021-10-14, 18:05authored byMichael
J. Strauss, Insu Hwang, Austin M. Evans, Anusree Natraj, Xavier Aguilar-Enriquez, Ioannina Castano, Emily K. Roesner, Jang Wook Choi, William R. Dichtel
Supramolecular
polymers are compelling platforms for the design
of stimuli-responsive materials with emergent functions. Here, we
report the assembly of an amphiphilic nanotube for Li-ion conduction
that exhibits high ionic conductivity, mechanical integrity, electrochemical
stability, and solution processability. Imine condensation of a pyridine-containing
diamine with a triethylene glycol functionalized isophthalaldehyde
yields pore-functionalized macrocycles. Atomic force microscopy, scanning
electron microscopy, and in solvo X-ray diffraction
reveal that macrocycle protonation during their mild synthesis drives
assembly into high-aspect ratio (>103) nanotubes with
three
interior triethylene glycol groups. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy
demonstrates that lithiated nanotubes are efficient Li+ conductors, with an activation energy of 0.42 eV and a peak room
temperature conductivity of 3.91 ± 0.38 × 10–5 S cm–1. 7Li NMR and Raman spectroscopy
show that lithiation occurs exclusively within the nanotube interior
and implicates the glycol groups in facilitating efficient Li+ transduction. Linear sweep voltammetry and galvanostatic
lithium plating-stripping tests reveal that this nanotube-based electrolyte
is stable over a wide potential range and supports long-term cyclability.
These findings demonstrate how the coupling of synthetic design and
supramolecular structural control can yield high-performance ionic
transporters that are amenable to device-relevant fabrication, as
well as the technological potential of chemically designed self-assembled
nanotubes.