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Nanocomposite polymer electrolytes for lithium batteries

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TLDR
In this article, the authors showed that nanometre-sized ceramic powders can be used as solid plasticizers for polyethylene oxide (PEO) electrolytes to prevent crystallization on annealing from amorphous state above 60°C.
Abstract
Ionically conducting polymer membranes (polymer electrolytes) might enhance lithium-battery technology by replacing the liquid electrolyte currently in use and thereby enabling the fabrication of flexible, compact, laminated solid-state structures free from leaks and available in varied geometries1. Polymer electrolytes explored for these purposes are commonly complexes of a lithium salt (LiX) with a high-molecular-weight polymer such as polyethylene oxide (PEO). But PEO tends to crystallize below 60 °C, whereas fast ion transport is a characteristic of the amorphous phase. So the conductivity of PEO–LiX electrolytes reaches practically useful values (of about 10−4 S cm−1) only at temperatures of 60–80 °C. The most common approach for lowering the operational temperature has been to add liquid plasticizers, but this promotes deterioration of the electrolyte's mechanical properties and increases its reactivity towards the lithium metal anode. Here we show that nanometre-sized ceramic powders can perform as solid plasticizers for PEO, kinetically inhibiting crystallization on annealing from the amorphous state above 60 °C. We demonstrate conductivities of around 10−4 S cm−1 at 50 °C and 10−5 S cm−1 at 30 °C in a PEO–LiClO4 mixture containing powders of TiO2 and Al2O3 with particle sizes of 5.8–13 nm. Further optimization might lead to practical solid-state polymer electrolytes for lithium batteries.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electrochemical measurement of transference numbers in polymer electrolytes

TL;DR: In this article, the transference number of lithium and trifluoromethanesulphonate ions in poly(ethylene oxide) at 90°C was measured and a mean value of 0.46 ± 0.02 was reported for lithium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of inert fillers on the mechanical and electrochemical properties of lithium salt-poly(ethylene oxide) polymer electrolytes

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of adding an inert filler (α-alumina) to lithium perchlorate-poly(ethylene oxide) polymer electrolytes have been investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Highly Conductive PEO-like Polymer Electrolytes

TL;DR: In this article, the thermal stability, mechanical strength, conductivity, electrochemical stability window, and Li/electrolyte interface stability of poly(vinylidene fluoride)−hexafluoropropene (PVdF−HFP) copolymer plasticized with a solution of LiSO3CF3, LiN(SO2CF3)2, or LiPF6 in oligomeric poly(ethylene glycol) dimethyl ethers (PEGDME, Mw = 250, 400, and 500).
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal Structure of the Polymer Electrolyte Poly(ethylene oxide)3:LiCF3SO3.

TL;DR: The crystal structure is reported of the archetypal polymer electrolyte poly(ethylene oxide)3:LiCF3SO3, which has been determined from powder x-ray diffraction data.
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