Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA

Solid polymer electrolytes are mixtures of polymer and inorganic salt. There are quite a number of studies dealing with the relationship between electric conductivity and structural relaxation in solid polymer electrolytes. We present a phenomenological approach based on fluctuation-dissipation proc...

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Main Authors: Chin Han Chan, Hans-Werner Kammer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Polymers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/12/5/1009
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spelling doaj-3237b215035242b083021097bcc4c2e52020-11-25T03:47:01ZengMDPI AGPolymers2073-43602020-04-01121009100910.3390/polym12051009Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMAChin Han Chan0Hans-Werner Kammer1Faculty of Applied Sciences, University Teknologi MARA, Shah Alam 40500, MalaysiaFaculty of Applied Sciences, University Teknologi MARA, Shah Alam 40500, MalaysiaSolid polymer electrolytes are mixtures of polymer and inorganic salt. There are quite a number of studies dealing with the relationship between electric conductivity and structural relaxation in solid polymer electrolytes. We present a phenomenological approach based on fluctuation-dissipation processes. Phase heterogeneity appears in poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) of high molecular mass and its blends due to crystallization and accompanying phase segregation. Addition of salt hampers crystallization, causing dynamic heterogeneity of the salt mixtures. Conductivity is bound to amorphous phase; the conductivity mechanism does not depend on content of added salt. One observes dispersion of conductivity relaxation only at low frequency. This is also true for blends with poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA). In blends, the dynamics of relaxation depend on glass transition of the system. Glassy PMMA hampers relaxation at room temperature. Relaxation can only be observed when salt content is sufficiently high. As long as blends are in rubbery state at room temperature, they behave PEO-like. Blends turn into glassy state when PMMA is in excess. Decoupling of long-ranging and dielectric short-ranging relaxation can be observed. Conductivity mechanism in PEO, as well as in blends with PMMA were analyzed in terms of complex impedance <i>Z*</i>, complex permittivity, tangent loss spectra and complex conductivity.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/12/5/1009impedance spectradielectric responsepolarization relaxationscaled conductivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chin Han Chan
Hans-Werner Kammer
spellingShingle Chin Han Chan
Hans-Werner Kammer
Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA
Polymers
impedance spectra
dielectric response
polarization relaxation
scaled conductivity
author_facet Chin Han Chan
Hans-Werner Kammer
author_sort Chin Han Chan
title Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA
title_short Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA
title_full Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA
title_fullStr Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA
title_full_unstemmed Low Frequency Dielectric Relaxation and Conductance of Solid Polymer Electrolytes with PEO and Blends of PEO and PMMA
title_sort low frequency dielectric relaxation and conductance of solid polymer electrolytes with peo and blends of peo and pmma
publisher MDPI AG
series Polymers
issn 2073-4360
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Solid polymer electrolytes are mixtures of polymer and inorganic salt. There are quite a number of studies dealing with the relationship between electric conductivity and structural relaxation in solid polymer electrolytes. We present a phenomenological approach based on fluctuation-dissipation processes. Phase heterogeneity appears in poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) of high molecular mass and its blends due to crystallization and accompanying phase segregation. Addition of salt hampers crystallization, causing dynamic heterogeneity of the salt mixtures. Conductivity is bound to amorphous phase; the conductivity mechanism does not depend on content of added salt. One observes dispersion of conductivity relaxation only at low frequency. This is also true for blends with poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA). In blends, the dynamics of relaxation depend on glass transition of the system. Glassy PMMA hampers relaxation at room temperature. Relaxation can only be observed when salt content is sufficiently high. As long as blends are in rubbery state at room temperature, they behave PEO-like. Blends turn into glassy state when PMMA is in excess. Decoupling of long-ranging and dielectric short-ranging relaxation can be observed. Conductivity mechanism in PEO, as well as in blends with PMMA were analyzed in terms of complex impedance <i>Z*</i>, complex permittivity, tangent loss spectra and complex conductivity.
topic impedance spectra
dielectric response
polarization relaxation
scaled conductivity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/12/5/1009
work_keys_str_mv AT chinhanchan lowfrequencydielectricrelaxationandconductanceofsolidpolymerelectrolyteswithpeoandblendsofpeoandpmma
AT hanswernerkammer lowfrequencydielectricrelaxationandconductanceofsolidpolymerelectrolyteswithpeoandblendsofpeoandpmma
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