The Influence of Polymer Molecular Weight on Transport Properties in Polymerized Ionic Liquids

ORAL

Abstract

We report results from atomistic molecular dynamics simulations on polymerized 1-butyl-3-vinylimidazolium-PF6- ionic liquids, studying the influence of the polymer molecular weight on the ion mobilities and mechanisms underlying ion transport. We present results for ionic diffusivity, ion-association dynamics, ion hopping, and ion-polymer coordination behavior. With increasing polymer molecular weight, the diffusivity of PF6- ions is seen decrease and plateaus above seven repeat units. The diffusivity is seen to correlate well with the ion-association structural relaxation time for pure ionic liquids, but becomes more correlated with the average ion-association lifetime for larger molecular weight polymers. By analyzing the diffusivity of ions based on coordination structure, we unearth a transport mechanism in which the PF6- moves by “climbing the ladder” while associated with four polymeric cations from two different polymers.

*We acknowledge funding in part by grants from the Robert A. Welch Foundation (Grant F1599), the National Science Foundation (DMR-1721512 and CBET-1706968), and the Donors of the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund (56715-ND9).

Presenters

  • Jordan Keith

    • Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin

Authors

  • Jordan Keith

    • Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin
  • Santhosh Mogurampally

    • Institute for Computational Molecular Science, Temple University
    • Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin
    • Univ of Texas, Austin
  • Faisal Aldukhi

    • Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Bill Wheatle

    • McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin
    • Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin
  • Venkatraghavan Ganesan

    • Univ of Texas, Austin
    • McKetta Department of Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin
    • Chemical Engineering, Univ of Texas, Austin
    • Chemical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin