posted on 2020-07-27, 20:14authored bySiqi Liu, Madhusudan Tyagi, Pinar Akcora
Solvent and polymer-grafted nanoparticle
addition to 1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium
bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (HMIM-TFSI) was investigated by
measuring the translational diffusion of cationic species in quasi-elastic
neutron scattering experiments and ionic conductivity by electrochemical
impedance spectroscopy. Adding polymers or nanoparticles to neat ionic
liquids generally increases their viscosity and lowers the ionic diffusivity.
In this work, we added two different solvents (acetonitrile and methanol)
to HMIM-TFSI/grafted particle mixtures to understand the interplay
between polymer–ionic liquid interactions and conformational
state of brushes, which governs the transport properties (diffusivity
and conductivity) of ionic liquids. Our results showed that with grafted
chains swollen in acetonitrile, the cationic mobility and ionic conductivity
were improved with the number of grafted chains on particles. The
unusual high diffusivity attained with the addition of PMMA-grafted
magnetic nanoparticles suggests that polymer-coupled ionic liquid
dynamics can be effective in increasing the free cation amount and,
therefore, ionic conductivity in particle-based electrolytes.