Open Access Article
Govinda Prasad Devkota,
Carter K. Dauenhauer,
Jizhou Jiang and
Jennifer L. Schaefer
*
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA. E-mail: Jennifer.L.Schaefer.43@nd.edu
First published on 21st November 2025
While single-ion conducting polymer electrolytes (SICPEs) are highly promising candidates for safer polymer electrolytes due to their stability and high transference number, their practical application is often hindered by substantially lower ionic conductivities. In this study, we investigate morphology and dynamics of a family of SICPEs based on a side-chain ionomer blended with poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) at various ratios. In the pure state, the side-chain ionomer is liquid crystalline with dense ionic layers. PEO addition reduced the primary glass transition temperature, accompanied by the emergence of a new glass transition attributed to the ionomer's polystyrene backbone. Morphologically, blends with lower PEO content maintained the lamellar structure of the pure ionomer, while higher PEO ratios resulted in increased disorder. The ionic conductivity of the blend at high PEO content (EO–Li ratio of 20–1) reached 7.9 × 10−5 S cm−1 at 90 °C, approximately four orders of magnitude greater than that of pure ionomer and similar to that of other PEO-ionomer blends containing tethered –sulfonyl(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (–TFSI−) anions. Dielectric spectroscopy revealed that PEO addition leads to increased coupling between dielectric relaxation and long-range ion transport.
Single-ion conducting polymer electrolytes (SICPEs), a particular class of the polymer electrolytes, are of great interest due to their high transference number.9 By covalently attaching the anionic site to the polymer framework, SICPEs theoretically achieve a cation transference number approaching unity.9–11 High active ion transference number results in higher limiting current and mitigated dendrite growth from metal anodes if active ion conductivity is maintained.12 However, despite these key advantages, SICPEs suffer from substantially lower ionic conductivity than dual-ion conductors.
A fundamental challenge in many polymer electrolytes is that ionic transport is strongly coupled with the segmental dynamics of the polymer backbone. This phenomenon is observed in polymer electrolytes containing polar functional groups, including the most commonly investigated poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), poly(carbonates), poly(esters), and others.13–18 This coupling often results in low ionic conductivities, especially at ambient temperatures, as ionic mobility is constrained by sluggish motion of the polymer backbone, preventing achieving comparable conductivities to liquid electrolytes. To overcome this, particularly in SICPEs, a key research focus has been on designing new SICPEs with decoupled ion transport from the polymer backbone dynamics.
One potential approach for achieving decoupling is ion transport through dense ionic aggregates. Several ionomers with precise and near-precise tethered ion spacing on the main chain polymer backbone or directly pendant to the backbone have been shown to contain percolated ion clusters, a necessary condition for ion transport predominantly through the ionic aggregate to result in high bulk ionic conductivity.19–22 Still, small changes to the molecular structure of these ionomers can impact the ion cluster morphology and no real system of this type that lacks additional solvation sites (small-molecule solvents or polymers) or supporting ions has been shown to facilitate lithium-ion transport at a rate that rivals that of SICPEs containing polar chains.
To further advance this strategy of ion transport through ion clusters, our previous work focused on designing SICPEs with ionic sites strategically positioned on flexible, non-polar side-chains of the nonpolar polymer backbone.23–25 This architecture promotes nanoscale phase segregation and the self-assembly of ordered ionic domains. Side-chain ionomers with para(polyphenylene) backbones and alkyl side-chains with varying lengths (C6 to C15) terminated with lithium titrated –sulfonyl(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (–TFSI−) anions were found to self-assemble predominately with one-dimensional ionic domains,24 whereas a side-chain ionomer termed LiPSC10TFSI with more flexible poly(styrene) backbone and decyl side-chains terminated with the same ionic group was found to self-assemble with two-dimensional (lamellar) ionic domains over a wide temperature range (from the ambient temperature glassy state to above 180 °C).25 These SICPEs can be classified as liquid crystalline at temperatures above their glass transition and exhibit elevated ionic conductivity in their pure state, lacking small-molecule or polymeric solvent, when compared with other dry, non-solvating ionomers such as LiPSTFSI.26 However, their ionic conductivity is still lower than necessary as a battery electrolyte for many applications – generally an active ion conductivity of at least 10−4 S cm−1 at the operating temperature is sought – and even lower than polyether-containing single-ion conductors.27
In other recent literature, it has been shown that swelling of ionic aggregates with solvating groups can enhance ionic conductivity.27 We hypothesized that the stable morphology of the liquid crystalline LiPSC10TFSI made it an ideal candidate to investigate the impact of doping the ionic clusters with a solvating polymer, effectively increasing the number of lithium solvation sites in the ionic domain. Here, we report on the thermal properties, morphology, and ion transport properties of blends of LiPSC10TFSI prepared via scalable free-radical polymerization with poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), varying the ethylene oxide (EO) to lithium (Li) ratios in the range of EO–Li of 2–1 to 20–1. We find that inclusion of PEO has profound implications on all investigated properties, including mesoscale structure, phase transitions, and dynamics.
000 g mol−1, was dried in a vacuum oven inside a glove box at 100 °C for 24 hours. The dried PEO was then dissolved in anhydrous acetonitrile at a concentration of 200 mg PEO per mL of acetonitrile. LiPSC10TFSI was added to PEO solution in dry vials at ethylene oxide to lithium ion (EO–Li) ratios of 2–1, 5–1, 10–1, and 20–1. After overnight stirring, the blended solutions were then drop-cast onto appropriate substrates, as detailed below for different measurements, and the solvent was completely evaporated by heating them under a vacuum oven at 120 °C for 24 hours. Removal of the solvent was confirmed with 1H NMR.
| Ratio | Tg,1 (°C) DSC | Tg,2 (°C) DSC | Tm (°C) DSC | Tg (°C) DRS | Estimated density (gm cm−3) | Volume fraction of polar phase | X-ray SLD of the non-polar phase (10−6/Å2) | X-ray SLD of the polar phase (10−6/Å2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–1 | 51 | n.d. | n.d. | 56 | 1.22 | 0.26 | 8.36 | 17.99 |
| 2–1 | 13 | 90 | n.d. | −14 | 1.21 | 0.38 | 8.36 | 14.84 |
| 5–1 | −12 | 90 | n.d. | −10 | 1.20 | 0.50 | 8.36 | 13.22 |
| 10–1 | −30 | 90 | n.d. | −31 | 1.18 | 0.62 | 8.36 | 12.19 |
| 20–1 | −46 | 90 | 58 | −34 | 1.17 | 0.75 | 8.36 | 11.54 |
Furthermore, in blends with lower PEO contents (e.g., 2–1, 5–1, and 10–1), no PEO crystallization and melting behavior is observed. It is important to note this absence may be a result of insufficient time for nucleation to occur in the material if the temperature ramp rate was comparatively fast. However, it is more likely the absence of crystallinity is attributed to the high concentration of lithium ions in these blends. By coordinating with the ether oxygens of PEO, these lithium ions significantly disrupt the regular packing of the PEO chains and restrict their mobility within the dense ionic network. This suppressed mobility of the PEO chains often effectively prevents them from forming organized, crystalline structures, hence the lack of distinct melting and crystallization peaks. Similar behavior is commonly reported in the literature for concentrated PEO-based electrolytes.39–41 Lack of crystallization of the electrolyte is desirable, as crystallization is often associated with a sharp decrease in ionic conductivity.
Conversely, at higher PEO concentrations, the emergence of PEO crystallization and subsequent melting is clearly evident. For instance, the blend with an EO–Li ratio of 20–1 demonstrates a distinct PEO melting endotherm at 58 °C. Although the crystallization exotherm is not observed upon cooling, a prominent crystallization exotherm is observed during the heating scan. This classic cold crystallization peak indicates that the cooling rate was too rapid for the PEO chains to crystallize. Upon heating the sample above the glass transition temperature of the blend, sufficient thermal energy becomes available for the PEO segments to rapidly reorganize and crystallize, resulting in this large, sharp exothermic peak during the heating scan. This indicates that at high PEO concentrations, the diluting effect of excess PEO on the ionic interactions allows for chain mobility sufficient for crystallization.
To understand the blend morphology, SAXS/WAXS patterns for all PEO-ionomer blends were compared at 100 °C (Fig. 3). The SAXS data revealed a significant broadening and reduction in the intensity of the ionic domain-related scattering peaks as the PEO content was increased. For the 2–1 blend compared with the ionomer, the volume fraction of the polar phase was increased by ∼50% and the difference in the scattering length densities (SLDs) between the polar and non-polar phases decreased by ∼33% (Table 1). The intensity (I) of SAXS signal is directly proportional to the square of the difference in SLD (I ∝ (Δρ)2), which is consistent with the decrease in signal intensity observed if considering that the PEO is homogeneously mixed with the ionic groups from the ionomer in the polar phase. Broadened SAXS peaks are clear at 0.198 and 0.383 Å−1, indicating that the lamellar morphology is maintained for the 2–1 blend. For the 5–1 blend, a sole SAXS peak at 0.189 Å−1 is consistent with continued increase in the domain spacing due to swelling of the ionic domains with PEO. The characteristic scattering peaks in the SAXS region were further broadened for the 10–1 case but shifted to higher q (0.191 Å−1) and not visible for the 20–1 case, suggesting increasing disorder. It is noted that for other PEO-based ionomeric copolymers and blends with tethered TFSI-derivative anions, the classic “ionomer peak” may not be observed due to lack of ionic aggregation and instead efficient solvation of the ionic sites by the polar polymer chains.42,43
The thermal stability of the blends was also investigated by in situ SAXS/WAXS measurements during cooling from 200 °C to 25 °C (Fig. S13–S16). For blends with higher PEO content, the SAXS peaks showed a more pronounced broadening at higher temperature. The peak broadening is attributed to the greater thermal mobility of PEO chains and potentially decreased dielectric constant, which disrupts the phase separation between ionic and non-polar domains. In contrast, ionomer-rich blends (e.g., 2–1) exhibited a more rigid framework due to stronger ionic forces, making them less susceptible to thermal disruption. While no sharp peaks were observed in the high-q WAXS region for the 2–1, 5–1, and 10–1 blend at any temperature or for the 20–1 blends at elevated temperatures, the 20–1 blend showed significant sharp peaks at lower temperatures, confirming the crystallization of the PEO component upon cooling below its melting point.
Another notable observation from the temperature-dependent SAXS analysis was the slight increase in the q values of the SAXS peaks with increasing temperature (Table S2). This suggests that ionic interlayers in the blends become closer together at a higher temperature rather than undergoing thermal expansion. This behavior is most likely a result of stronger coulombic interactions between ions occurring at higher temperatures, as discussed in the literature.28,44
Finally, there are no new scattering peaks that would suggest the emergence of a new ion complex phase that produces the elevated glass transition (Tg,2) in all of the blends. Therefore, based upon this additional evidence it is hypothesized that the high temperature Tg,2 is related to the polystyrene-backbone morphology that is not visible with SAXS/WAXS.
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| Fig. 5 Ionic conductivity of pure ionomer and PEO-ionomer blends with respect to inverse temperature, along with VFT (solid lines) and Arrhenius (dotted line) fits. | ||
At 90 °C, the ionic conductivity of the PEO-ionomer blends exhibits a clear trend of increasing conductivity with higher PEO content (Table 2). A modest increase in conductivity at lower temperatures is observed when introducing the 2–1 EO–Li ratio blend compared to the pure ionomer. However, a significant enhancement in conductivity is evident as the PEO content increases further, with the 5–1 blend showing an approximate 2.3 orders of magnitude increase in conductivity compared to the 2–1 blend. This substantial jump in conductivity for the 5–1 blend is primarily attributed to the establishment of an optimal coordination environment for the lithium ions by the ether oxygens of PEO, which significantly enhances ion mobility in this composition. In the 2–1 blend, there is an insufficient amount of PEO to achieve complete and efficient coordination of all lithium ions, leading to increased ion-ion interaction. Conversely, the 5–1 blend provides sufficient ether oxygens from PEO to optimally coordinate the lithium ions, which significantly enhances their dissociation and mobility.
| Material | Temperature (°C) | Conductivity (S cm−1) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| PEO-ionomer (20–1) | 90 | 7.9 × 10−5 | This work |
| PEO-ionomer (10–1) | 90 | 3.3 × 10−5 | This work |
| PEO-ionomer (5–1) | 90 | 6.1 × 10−6 | This work |
| PEO-ionomer (2–1) | 90 | 2.9 × 10−8 | This work |
| Pure ionomer (0–1) | 90 | 1.1 × 10−8 | This work |
| PEO-p5PhTFSI-Li (7.7–1) | 90 | 2.0 × 10−4 | Nguyen, Nam, et al.45 |
| PEO-p5PhTFSI-Li (10–1) | 90 | 3.8 × 10−5 | Paren, Benjamin A., et al.28 |
| PEO-(polyFAST-NO) | 80 | 6.6 × 10−5 | Zhang, Wenxu et al.47 |
| PEO-LiPSS (20–1) | 90 | 1.9 × 10−7 | Ma, Qiang, et al.48 |
| PEO-LiPSTFSI (20–1) | 90 | 3.2 × 10−5 | |
| PEO-LiPSsTFSI (20–1) | 90 | 1.5 × 10−4 | |
| PEO-LiTFSI (20–1) | 90 | 1.3 × 10−3 | |
| PEO-LiPSFSI (20–1) | 90 | 3.9 × 10−5 | Ma, Qiang, et al.46 |
While this upward trend in conductivity continues for the 10–1 and 20–1 blends, the observed increases are again modest in these higher PEO content blends. This plateauing of the conductivity enhancement suggests that beyond the 5–1 ratio, the additional PEO might not significantly contribute to further lithium-ion coordination, as the optimal coordination sphere may already be established. Instead, the excess PEO might primarily contribute to increasing the relaxation rate in the polar phase which will be discussed in the later sections. The 20–1 blend demonstrates a conductivity of approximately 4 orders of magnitude greater than that of the pure ionomer (0–1) at 90 °C.
Table 2 compares the ionic conductivity of the PEO-ionomer blends investigated in this work with a selection of previously reported solid polymer electrolytes. The data presented at a consistent temperature of 90 °C (unless otherwise specified) to allow a direct comparison of performance. As shown in Table 2, the PEO-ionomer blend (20–1) exhibits an ionic conductivity of 7.9 × 10−5 S cm−1 at 90 °C. This result is similar to other advanced single-ion conducting polymer electrolytes reported in the literature, such as the PEO-p5PhTFSI-Li (3.8 × 10−5 S cm−1 and 2.0 × 10−4, with varied PEO molecular weights and loadings),28,45 PEO-LiPSFSI (3.9 × 10−5 S cm−1),46 and a PEO-(polyFAST-NO) blend (6.6 × 10−5 S cm−1 at 80 °C).47 The performance of the aforementioned blends is notably superior to that of systems like PEO-LiPSS (1.9 × 10−7 S cm−1),48 which have a less delocalized sulfonate anion directly tethered to the polymer backbone.
While most of the ionomers reported here tether their ionic group directly to the polymer backbone, our unique ionomer consists of a polystyrene backbone with a flexible decyl side chain. The bulky, charge delocalized TFSI anion is tethered to the side chain rather than directly into the backbone. This design enhances the flexibility and mobility of the tethered anion, which contributes to increased segmental relaxation and facilitates more efficient lithium-ion transport in the pure ionomer case.49 However, it is seen here that the hydrophobic side-chain does not result in improved conductivity for the PEO-ionomer blends, which is likely because the non-polar side-chain does not promote mixing between the PEO and the tethered ionic group.
![]() | (1) |
Here, ε* represents the complex permittivity, ε′ is the real permittivity, ε″ is the imaginary permittivity, A is the power law prefactor, n is the power of the power law, σ is the DC conductivity, ε0 is the permittivity of free space, ε∞ is the permittivity at infinite frequency, τHN is the relaxation time associated with the Havriliak–Negami relaxation, Δε is the strength of relaxation, and a and b are shape parameters.
The static dielectric constant (εs), of the pure ionomer and blends was obtained by summing Δε and ε∞ from Havriliak–Negami model fitting (Δε = εs − ε∞) and is shown in Fig. 6. In the pure ionomer (0–1), and blends 2–1 and 5–1, it is observed that εs increases with increasing temperature, unlike Onsager predictions where εs decreases as the temperature increases.50,51 In ionomer-based materials, this temperature-dependent increase in εs is due to the greater movement and rearrangement of ions at higher temperatures. This effect is particularly relevant in systems exhibiting phase-separated structures having highly concentrated ionic domains.50,51
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| Fig. 6 Dielectric constants, εs, for pure ionomer and various PEO-ionomer blends as a function of inverse temperature. | ||
Consistent with the previous studies on PEO-ionomer blends,28 the εs of the pure ionomer (0–1) was found slightly higher than that of the 2–1 blend, even though pure ionomer has more dense ionic domains and ordered structure. In the 2–1 blend there is not enough PEO to fully solvate the lithium cations, so there must still be significant ion pairing. The 2–1 blend also exhibits less ordered domains than the pure ionomer, which we hypothesize could potentially result in a lower dielectric constant. The PEO may act as a crosslinker, coordinating to lithium cations that individually coordinate with anions attached to side-chains in different non-polar domains and resulting in less local anion alignment. The drastic enhancement in the εs values of 5–1 in comparison to 2–1 is likely due to ionic domains being swollen by enough PEO to significantly enhance the lithium ions dissociation from the tethered anions and their long-range rearrangement within dynamically forming ionic networks.
However, in the blends with higher PEO content (10–1 and 20–1), the εs decreases with increasing temperature, although these blends exhibit higher εs value compared to other blends. This higher magnitude of εs results from the strong dissociation of ions facilitated by the high PEO content, which effectively dilutes the ionomer's ionic domains, thereby reducing ion aggregation and allowing dipoles to respond more freely to an applied electric field. The observed decrease in εs with increasing temperature is consistent with predictions from the Onsager theory for polar liquids, a behavior commonly observed in ionomers and ionomer-polymer blends.28,50,52,53 According to this model, reduced thermal energy at lower temperatures allows for a more effective alignment of permanent dipoles with the electric field, thus enhancing macroscopic polarization and, consequently εs.
To probe the dielectric relaxation behavior, maximum angular frequency (ωmax), or dielectric relaxation rate are calculated by parameters gained from H–N model fitting, as shown in eqn (2).
![]() | (2) |
The temperature dependence of the maximum dielectric relaxation rate (ωmax) for all investigated samples, including the pure ionomer and the PEO-ionomer blends, follows VFT behavior (shown in Fig. 7), suggesting that the dielectric process is coupled to conductivity relaxation and originates from free volume. Extrapolating the VFT fitting curve to an angular frequency of 0.01 rad s−1 allows for the determination of the dielectric relaxation spectroscopy glass transition temperature (DRS Tg). This specific angular frequency represents the condition where the material's structure is effectively frozen. The DRS Tg for pure ionomer is 56 °C, substantially higher than the DRS Tg's of −14, −10, −31, and −34 °C for 2–1, 5–1, 10–1, and 20–1 PEO-ionomer blends. These Tg values obtained from DSC and DRS experiments are within 15 °C for all pure ionomer and 5–1, 10–1, and 20–1 PEO-ionomer blends suggesting that dielectric relaxation processes in these blends are highly correlated with segmental relaxation, with probably some amount of relaxation from the local ion rearrangement as well. However, the 2–1 PEO-ionomer blend exhibits a relatively higher difference between its DSC and DRS Tg values than other blends. This is likely due to the small amount of PEO acting as a crosslinker, which slows the large-scale polymer motion relative to the higher PEO content cases while still allowing for more localized ion hopping relative to the pure ionomer case to be measured by DRS.
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| Fig. 7 Maximum dielectric relaxation rates, ωmax, for pure ionomer and various PEO-ionomer blends plotted as functions of inverse temperature, along with lines representing VFT fits. | ||
While the relaxation rate of pure ionomer at higher temperatures is comparable to, or even slightly higher than, that of the most concentrated PEO blend (2–1 EO–Li), its ωmax decreases much faster than those of all other PEO-ionomer blends as temperature decreases. In contrast, for the PEO-ionomer blends (2–1 to 20–1 EO–Li), the relaxation rate shows a clear trend: it gradually increases with increasing PEO concentration of the blend. This suggests that the decreased ion density in the ionic domain leads to enhanced conductivity relaxation. This dynamic behavior is somewhat aligned with the observed ionic conductivities of the pure ionomer and the PEO-ionomer blends, as presented in Fig. 5, except that the jump in bulk ionic conductivity between the 2–1 and 5–1 PEO-ionomer blends substantially exceeds the jump in the conductivity relaxation rate.
To further interrogate the ion transport mechanism, the ionic conductivity is presented against normalized temperature by DSC Tg,1 and DRS Tg respectively. The degree to which these normalized conductivity curves overlap across different samples directly indicates whether the DC conduction mechanism is similarly governed by the respective glass transition (DSC or DRS) for all compositions.
As shown in Fig. 8a, the DSC Tg,1 normalized conductivity of pure ionomer (0–1), 5–1, and 10–1 PEO-ionomer blends are very close to each other across the entire investigated temperature range. This overlap indicates that for all these compositions, the primary mechanism of ion transport is consistently coupled to the polymer's segmental dynamics, with the DSC glass transition temperature effectively normalizing their conductivity behavior. The significant drop in the DSC Tg,1-normalized conductivity curve for the 2–1 blend, suggests decoupling between ion movement and polymer segmental dynamics for this specific composition. The significant drop in DSC Tg,1 between the pure ionomer and 2–1 blend does not increase the real ionic conductivity. This result may be due to the dilute PEO acting as a crosslinker between ions connected to side-chains from different non-polar domains and slowing their long-range motion. Conversely, while the 20–1 blend's DSC Tg,1-normalized conductivity initially aligns with the master curve at higher temperatures, it drops sharply at lower temperatures due to crystallization.
A more nuanced understanding of the ion transport mechanism emerges from the DRS Tg-normalized conductivity curves, as shown in Fig. 8b. Here the pure ionomer's curve deviates significantly from the other PEO-ionomer blends. This highlights a different influence of the dielectric relaxation process between the blends in the melt state and the pure ionomer, across the entire investigated blend composition range of 2–1 to 20–1. This suggests that the bulk ionic conductivity, or long-range ion motion, in the pure ionomer is restricted by the dense ionic aggregation. In the pure ionomer, a smaller fraction of the local ion motions may be contributing to long-range ion transport; backward ion motion may be more prevalent.54 In contrast, the 2–1, 5–1, 10–1, and 20–1 blends in the melt state remain comparatively close in the DRS Tg-normalized conductivity plot, indicating the role of PEO in facilitating long-range ion transport that is coupled to the dielectric relaxation.
Barton, Nakajima, and Namikawa (BNN) have proposed a linear scaling theory between ionic conductivity and the dielectric relaxation rate.1,55,56 The BNN plot relation is empirically described by σ = Bε0ωmax. As shown in the BNN plot (Fig. 9), the observed behavior of materials varies significantly. The pure ionomer exhibits a scaling factor B value falling slightly below the ideal scaling line (i = 1), indicating that the ion rearrangement process governs the lithium ions transport. In contrast, all the PEO-ionomer blends show that their data points lie above the ideal scaling line. The 20–1 blend in the melt state shows a distinctly higher B, which indicates that when accounting for differences in the conductivity relaxation and dielectric constant that the long-range ion motion is faster for this sample and distinct from the other blends. These results are in agreement with substantial research literature showing that bulk lithium-ion conductivity in single-ion conductors containing PEO is optimized when ion contents are in the range of EO–Li of 20–1 to 30–1, due to decreased ionic aggregation and increased segmental relaxation compared to higher ion concentration cases.
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| Fig. 9 BNN scaling plot for pure ionomer and PEO-ionomer blends. The line represents the ideal scaling factor, B = 1. | ||
Raw data may be provided by the authors upon request.
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