Abstract

Zwitterionic (ZI) polymers enable the formation of noncovalent cross-links within ionic liquid electrolytes (ILEs) to create nonflammable, mechanically robust, and highly conductive ionogel electrolytes. In this study, ZI homopolymer poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine) [poly(MPC)] scaffolds are synthesized in situ within lithium and/or sodium salt-based ILEs to construct a series of ionogels that contain between 3 and 15 wt % poly(MPC). Room-temperature ionic conductivity values of these ionogels are found to vary between approximately 1.3 and 2.2 mS cm-1. For sodium only and 1:1 lithium/sodium equimolar mixed salt ionogels containing 6 wt % poly(MPC), the ionic conductivity is found to improve by 14% compared to the neat ILE due to the presence of the ZI scaffold. Moreover, comparing the elastic modulus values of lithium- versus sodium-containing ionogels revealed a difference of up to 1 order of magnitude [10.6 vs 111 kPa, respectively, for 3 wt % poly(MPC)]. Molecular dynamics simulations of ionogel precursor solutions corroborate the experimental results by demonstrating differences in the lithium/ZI monomer and sodium/ZI monomer cluster size distributions formed, which is hypothesized to influence the scaffold network cross-link density obtained upon photopolymerization. This work provides insights into why ZI polymer-supported ionogel properties that are relevant for the development of safer electrolytes for lithium-ion and sodium-ion batteries depend upon the chemical identity of the alkali metal cation.

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