Published November 8, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The role of coordination strength in solid polymer electrolytes: compositional dependence of transference numbers in the poly(ε-caprolactone)–poly(trimethylene carbonate) system

  • 1. Department of Chemistry – Ångström Laboratory, Uppsala University, Box 538, SE-751 21 Uppsala, Sweden

Description

Both polyesters and polycarbonates have been proposed as alternatives to polyethers as host materials for future polymer electrolytes for solid-state lithium-ion batteries. While being comparatively similar functional groups, the electron density on the coordinating carbonyl oxygen is different, thereby rendering different coordinating strength towards lithium ions. In this study, the transport properties of poly(ε-caprolactone) and poly(trimethylene carbonate) as well as random copolymers of systematically varied composition of the two have been investigated, in order to better elucidate the role of the coordination strength. The cationic transference number, a property well-connected with the complexing ability of the polymer, was shown to depend almost linearly on the ester content of the copolymer, increasing from 0.49 for the pure poly(ε-caprolactone) to 0.83 for pure poly(trimethylene carbonate). Contradictory to the transference number measurements that suggest a stronger lithium-to-ester coordination, DFT calculations showed that the carbonyl oxygen in the carbonate coordinates more strongly to the lithium ion than that of the ester. FT-IR measurements showed the coordination number to be higher in the polyester system, resulting in a higher total coordination strength and thereby resolving the paradox. This likely originates in properties that are specific of polymeric solvent systems, e.g. steric properties and chain dynamics, which influence the coordination chemistry. These results highlight the complexity in polymeric systems and their ion transport properties in comparison to low-molecular-weight analogues, and how polymer structure and steric effects together affect the coordination strength and transport properties.

Notes

This work has been financed through support from the ERC, grant no. 771777 FUN POLYSTORE and ECO2LIB (European Union H2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 875514). The authors would also like to acknowledge STandUP for Energy. A. M. is thankful for the support for Swedish National Strategic e-Science programme (eSSENCE) and Swedish Research Council (Registration No. 2019-05366) for funding. The DFT calculations were performed on resources provided by the Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing (SNIC) at NSC.

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Funding

European Commission
FUN POLYSTORE - FUNctionalized POLYmer electrolytes for energy STORagE 771777
European Commission
ECO2LIB - Ecologically and Economically viable Production and Recycling of Lithium-Ion Batteries 875514