Abstract

AbstractThe battery separator plays a key role in determining the capacity of the battery. Since separator performance mainly depends on the pore size of membrane, development of a technique for the fabrication of the membrane having controlled pore size is essential in producing a highly functional battery separator. In this study, microporous membranes having the desired pore size were produced via thermally‐induced phase separation (TIPS) process. Control of the phase boundaries of polymer‐diluent blends is the main concern in manipulating pore size in TIPS process, because pore size mainly depends on the temperature gap between phase separation temperature of the blend and the crystallization temperature of polymer. Microporous membranes having controlled pore size were produced from polyethylene (PE)/dioctyl phthalate (DOP) blends, PE/isoparaffin blends, and polymer/diluent‐mixture ternary blends, that is, PE/(DOP/isoparaffin) blends. PE/DOP binary blends and PE/(DOP/isoparaffin) ternary blends exhibited typical upper critical solution temperature (UCST) type phase behavior, while PE formed a homogeneous mixture with isoparaffin above the crystallization temperature of PE. When the mixing ratio of polymer and diluent‐mixture was fixed, the phase separation temperature of PE/diluent‐mixture blend first increased with increasing DOP content in the diluent‐mixture, went through a maximum centered at about 80 wt % DOP and then decreased. Furthermore, the phase separation temperatures of the PE/diluent‐mixture blends were always higher than that of the PE/DOP blend when diluent‐mixture contained more than or equal to 20 wt % of DOP. Average pore size of microporous membrane prepared from PE/DOP blend and that prepared from PE/isoparaffin blend were 0.17 and 0.07 μm, respectively. However, average pore size of microporous membrane prepared from ternary blends was varied from 0.07 to 0.5 μm by controlling diluent mixing ratio. To understand the phase behavior of ternary blend, phase instability of the ternary mixture was also explored. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 44: 2025–2034, 2006

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