Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Over the past few decades, lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) have gained significant attention due to their inherent potential for environmental sustainability and unparalleled energy storage efficiency. Meanwhile, polymer electrolytes have gained popularity in several fields due to their ability to adapt to various battery geometries, enhanced safety features, greater thermal stability, and effectiveness in reducing dendrite growth on the anode. However, their relatively low ionic conductivity compared to liquid electrolytes has limited their application in high-performance devices. This limitation has led to recent studies revolving around the development of poly(ionic liquids) (PILs), particularly imidazolium-mediated polymer backbones as novel electrolyte materials, which can increase the conductivity with fine-tuning structural benefits, while maintaining the advantages of both solid and gel electrolytes. In this study, a curated dataset of 120 data points representing eight different polymers was used to predict ionic conductivity in imidazolium-based PILs as well as the emerging ionene substructures. For this purpose, four ML models: CatBoost, Random Forest, XGBoost, and LightGBM were employed by incorporating chemical structure and temperature as the models' inputs. The best-performing model was further employed to estimate the conductivity of novel ionenes, offering insights into the potential of advanced polymer architectures for next-generation LIB electrolytes. This approach provides a cost-effective and intelligent pathway to accelerate the design of high-performance electrolyte materials.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12349494PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym17152148DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

imidazolium-mediated polymer
8
polymer electrolytes
8
lithium-ion batteries
8
ionic conductivity
8
electrolyte materials
8
electrolytes
5
designing imidazolium-mediated
4
polymer
4
electrolytes lithium-ion
4
batteries machine-learning
4

Similar Publications

Over the past few decades, lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) have gained significant attention due to their inherent potential for environmental sustainability and unparalleled energy storage efficiency. Meanwhile, polymer electrolytes have gained popularity in several fields due to their ability to adapt to various battery geometries, enhanced safety features, greater thermal stability, and effectiveness in reducing dendrite growth on the anode. However, their relatively low ionic conductivity compared to liquid electrolytes has limited their application in high-performance devices.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The accumulation of plastic waste in the environment is a growing environmental, economic, and societal challenge. Plastic upgrading, the conversion of low-value polymers to high-value materials, could address this challenge. Among upgrading strategies, the sulfonation of aromatic polymers is a powerful approach to access high-value materials for a range of applications, such as ion-exchange resins and membranes, electronic materials, and pharmaceuticals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is highly desirable to integrate the CO solubility benefits of ionic liquids (ILs) in polymeric membrane systems for effective CO separations. Herein, we are exclusively exploring a series of four novel imidazolium-mediated Tröger's base (TB)-containing ionene polymers for enhanced CO separation. The two diimidazole-functionalized Tröger's base monomers synthesized from "ortho"- and "para"-substituted imidazole anilines were polymerized with equimolar amounts of two different aromatic and aliphatic comonomers (α,α'-dichloro--xylene and 1,10-dibromodecane, respectively) via Menshutkin reactions to obtain four respective ionene polymers ([Im-TB(&)-Xy][Cl] and ([Im-TB(&)-C][Br], respectively).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF