International audienceSafety is one of the most important criteria for electrochemical energy storage devices used in large scale applications such as wind or solar farms. In this context, solid polymer electrolytes based on nanostructured block copolymer electrolytes (BCEs) are promising because their properties can be finely tuned by adjusting simultaneously their block chemistries and polymer architectures. However, there is a need to rationalize the different properties of BCE that are optimal for battery applications. We produced by controlled radical polymerization a large number of BCEs based on either (1) linear poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) or (2) comb PEO as the ionic conductor block, and polystyrene as the structural block. We varied the molecular weight of the PEO-based block, the composition, and the architecture (diblock vs triblock). We performed a systematic analysis of their thermodynamic, ionic transport, and mechanical properties. To verify the potential of BCEs as electrolytes, we evaluated their electrochemical stabilities. Laboratory scale batteries comprising the best BCEs and LiFePO4 as a positive active material were cycled at different rates and temperatures. This process allows the selection of the best architectures and compositions that had been successfully tested in battery prototypes and cycled for more than 600 cycles at high rates without any dendritic growth
International audienceThis review described the potential of the intermolecular radical 1,2-addition from the commercially available BlocBuilder MA alkoxyamine onto activated olefins to synthesize either new functionalized alkoxyamines or various macromolecular architectures. Following this approach, diblock, triblock copolymers, star polymers and hybrid materials are then easily prepared. The various applications of such architectures will be briefly reviewed. Interestingly this new synthetic tool widely expands the range of complex macromolecular architectures which could be obtained by the nitroxide-mediated polymerization (NMP) process
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.