Abstract

A microphase-separating single-ion conductor, poly[ methacrylate-ran-lithium methacrylate]-graft-poly(dimethyl siloxane), P(OEM--LiMA)--PDMS, was prepared by lithiating a precursor polymer synthesized by free radical methods using commercially available macromonomers. This material possessed a low conductivity, stemming from high ion-pairing interactions that severely restricted the number of charge carriers available for conduction. Subsequent conversion of the LiMA units via the addition of , a Lewis acid, resulted in a 2 orders-of-magnitude rise in conductivity, a gain that could be attributed to a large increase in the number of mobile cations. By blending this material with uncharged POEM--PDMS, the room-temperature conductivity was optimized to . With a lithium transference number of unity, these materials exhibit higher dc-measured conductivities at elevated currents than their salt-doped counterparts and are electrochemically stable to .

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