3D Printed Solid Polymer Electrolytes with Bicontinuous Nanoscopic Domains for Ionic Liquid Conduction and Energy Storage

Author:

Melodia Daniele1,Bhadra Abhirup23,Lee Kenny1,Kuchel Rhiannon4,Kundu Dipan23,Corrigan Nathaniel15ORCID,Boyer Cyrille15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemical Engineering, UNSW, Australia Cluster for Advanced Macromolecular Design (CAMD) Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

2. School of Chemical Engineering UNSW Australia Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

3. School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering UNSW Australia Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

4. Electron Microscope Unit (EMU) UNSW Australia Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

5. Australian Centre for NanoMedicine (ACN) School of Chemical Engineering UNSW Australia Sydney NSW 2052 Australia

Abstract

AbstractSolid polymer electrolytes (SPEs) offer several advantages compared to their liquid counterparts, and much research has focused on developing SPEs with enhanced mechanical properties while maintaining high ionic conductivities. The recently developed polymerization‐induced microphase separation (PIMS) technique offers a straightforward pathway to fabricate bicontinuous nanostructured materials in which the mechanical properties and conductivity can be independently tuned. In this work SPEs with tunable mechanical properties and conductivities are prepared via digital light processing 3D printing, exploiting the PIMS process to achieve nanostructured ion‐conducting materials for energy storage applications. A rigid crosslinked poly(isobornyl acrylate‐stat‐trimethylpropane triacrylate) scaffold provided materials with room temperature shear modulus above 400 MPa, while soft poly(oligoethylene glycol methyl ether acrylate) domains containing the ionic liquid 1‐butyl‐3‐methylimidazolium bis‐(trifluoromethyl sulfonyl)imide endowed the material with ionic conductivity up to 1.2 mS cm−1 at 30 °C. These features make the 3D‐printed SPE very competitive for applications in all solid energy storage devices, including supercapacitors.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Biomaterials,Biotechnology,General Materials Science,General Chemistry

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