Abstract

Current research efforts are focused on endowing polymer membranes with ion–ion selectivity by incorporating ion–polymer interactions into materials to bias the selective partitioning and or diffusivity of one species over another. However, little is known about the impact of such interactions on the mechanisms of ion transport. In this study, we probe the influence of cation–polymer interactions on cation, anion, and salt diffusivity in a model membrane material, poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) by modeling concentrated polyethylene oxide solutions via molecular dynamics simulations. These results are compared to published experimental data for LiCl, NaCl, and KCl diffusion in PEGDA. Experimentally, the order of salt and cation diffusion coefficients for LiCl, NaCl, and KCl deviate from the order in aqueous solutions. Simulations identify these deviations to arise from cation–polymer coordination in the membrane. Both the fraction of bound cations and the average binding lifetime increases with decreasing cation hydration free energy (moving down the alkali series), leading to different diffusivity trends in the membrane compared to solution. However, to recover the experimentally observed order of diffusivities cations and salt in our simulations, we needed to incorporate membrane heterogeneity explicitly via a polymer charge scaling procedure. Together, our results indicate that cation–polymer interactions, as well as spatial heterogeneity within the membrane, play a critical role in dictating the observed order of alkali cation and salt diffusion coefficients in membranes.

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