APS March Meeting 2015 
Volume 60, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2015;
San Antonio, Texas
Session L45: Focus Session: Polymers in Batteries and Electrochemical Capacitors II
8:00 AM–11:00 AM, 
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Room: 216AB
Sponsoring
Unit: 
DPOLY
Chair: Jodie Lutkenhaus, Texas A&M University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.MAR.L45.10
Abstract: L45.00010 : Dynamics of Polymerized Ionic Liquids and their Monomers
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
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 Abstract
  Abstract   
Author:
Ralph H. Colby
(Materials Science and Engineering, Penn State University)
Dielectric spectroscopy determines the static dielectric constants 
($\varepsilon_{s} )$ of polymers with imidazolium pendant structures 
containing a combination of alkylene and ethyleneoxy units as spacers 
between the backbone and the imidazolium cation. All monomers and their 
polymers exhibited two dipolar relaxations, assigned to the usual segmental 
motion ($\alpha )$ associated with the glass transition and a lower 
frequency stronger relaxation ($\alpha_{2} )$, attributed to ions 
rearranging. While ion pairs in conventional (smaller) ionic liquids prefer 
antiparallel alignment (Kirkwood $g\approx 0.1$ with $\varepsilon_{s} $ 
$\approx $ 15), because their polarizability volumes strongly overlap, ion 
pair dipoles in the larger ionic liquid monomers display $g$ of order unity 
and $50\le \varepsilon_{s} \le 110$. Longer spacers lead to higher static 
dielectric constant, owing to a significant increase of the relaxation 
strength of the $\alpha_{2} $ process, which is directly reflected through 
an unanticipated increase of the static dielectric constant with ionic 
liquid molecular volume. The ionomers consistently exhibit 1.5 - 2.3 times 
higher static dielectric constants than the monomers from which they were 
synthesized, suggesting that polymerization encourages the observed 
synergistic dipole alignment ($g>1)$. Comparison of dielectric and linear 
viscoelastic responses reveals a strong connection between the time scales 
of polymer segmental motion ($\alpha )$, ion rearrangements ($\alpha_{2} )$ 
and the viscoelastic softening associated with the glass transition. For all 
polymers with imidazolium side chains and a wide variety of counter-anions, 
there is a strong correlation between glass transition temperature and 
repeat unit molecular volume. Large side chains have low T$_{\mathrm{g}}$ 
$\approx $ -50 $^{\mathrm{o}}$C and their ionic conductivity increases as 
ethylene oxide repeats are incorporated into the side chains.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.MAR.L45.10