Anion chemical composition of poly(ethylene oxide)-based sulfonylimide and sulfonate lithium ionomers controls ion aggregation and conduction†
Abstract
Maximizing ion conduction in single-ion-conducting ionomers is essential for their application in energy-related technologies such as Li-ion batteries. Understanding the anion chemical composition impacts on ion conduction offers new perspectives to maximize ion transport, since the current approach of lowering Tg has apparently reached a limit (lowest Tg ∼ 190 K, highest conductivity ∼10−5–10−4 S cm−1). Here, a series of random ionomers are synthesized by copolymerizing poly(ethylene glycol)methacrylate with either sulfonylimide lithium methacrylate (MTLi) or sulfonate lithium methacrylate (MSLi) using reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. Li-Ion conduction and self-diffusion coefficients (DLi+) of the ionomers are characterized with dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS) and pulsed-field-gradient (PFG) NMR diffusometry, respectively. Increasing ion content decreases the Li-ion conductivity and DLi+, as expected from the increased Tg. Moreover, a considerably lower ionic conductivity and DLi+ are observed for MSLi compared to MTLi at constant ion content and Tg/T. As revealed from X-ray scattering, strong ion aggregation in MSLi results in much lower conductivity and DLi+ compared with less aggregated MTLi based on the more delocalized sulfonylimide anion. These results emphasize the detrimental and molecularly specific role of ion aggregation in Li-ion conductivity, and highlight the necessity for minimizing ion aggregation via the rational choice of anion chemical composition.