Decoupling Conductivity and Segmental Motion in Polymerized Ionic Liquids
ORAL
Abstract
We characterize diffusion trends in polymerized ionic liquids using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of a number of anion species and imidazolium cations, both tethered to and implanted in poly-alkyl backbones, to develop design guidelines for polymerized ionic liquids with highly decoupled conductivity and polymer segmental dynamics. We use glass-transition-normalized temperature to compare conductivity for similar segmental dynamics behavior across a variety of chemical species. Results suggest that ion mobility decoupling depends on two distinct modes: 1) a small-ion ion-pairing mode where conduction relies heavily on an ion-hopping mechanism that has been explored previously, and 2) a large-ion free-volume diffusion mode that utilizes large, interconnected gaps in the polymer matrix for diffusion in the absence of segmental motion.
*The authors acknowledge the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin, and 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).
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Presenters
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Jordan Keith
- University of Texas at Austin