High refractive index polymers (HRIPs) have recently emerged as an important class of materials for use in a variety of optoelectronic devices including image sensors, lithography, and light-emitting diodes. However, achieving polymers having refractive index exceeding 1.8 while maintaining full transparency in the visible range still remains formidably challenging. Here, we present a unique one-step vapor-phase process, termed sulfur chemical vapor deposition, to generate highly stable, ultrahigh refractive index (n > 1.9) polymers directly from elemental sulfur. The deposition process involved vapor-phase radical polymerization between elemental sulfur and vinyl monomers to provide polymer films with controlled thickness and sulfur content, along with the refractive index as high as 1.91. Notably, the HRIP thin film showed unprecedented optical transparency throughout the visible range, attributed to the absence of long polysulfide segments within the polymer, which will serve as a key component in a wide range of optical devices.
High refractive index (RI) thin films
are of critical importance
for advanced optical devices, and the high refractive index polymers
(HRIPs) constitute an interesting class of materials for high RI thin
films due to low cost, good processability, light weight, and high
flexibility. However, HRIPs have yet to realize their full potential
in high RI thin film applications due to their relatively low RI,
strong absorption in the blue light region, and limited film formation
methods such as rapid vitrification. Herein, we report a development
of a new HRIP thin film generated through a one-step vapor-phase process,
termed sulfur chemical vapor deposition (sCVD), using elemental sulfur
and divinyl benzene. The developed poly(sulfur-co-divinyl benzene) (pSDVB-sCVD) film exhibited RI (measured at 632.8
nm) exceeding 1.97, one of the highest RIs among polymers without
metallic elements reported to date. Because the sCVD utilized vaporized
sulfur with a unique sulfur-cracking step, formation of long polysulfide
chains was suppressed efficiently, while high sulfur content as high
as 85 wt % could be achieved with no apparent phase separation. Unlike
most of inorganic high RI materials, pSDVB-sCVD was highly transparent
in the entire visible range and showed extremely low birefringence
of 10 × 10–4. The HRIP thin film with unprecedentedly
high RI, together with outstanding transparency and low birefringence,
will serve as a key component in a wide range of high-end optical
device applications.
We herein report the preparation of high refractive index polymers (HRIPs) with enhanced thermal stability from the copolymerization of S 8 and divinylbenzene (DVB) in a single step through sulfur chemical vapor deposition (sCVD). Varying the process temperature in sCVD allowed for the preparation of a series of high sulfur content polymers which, in comparison to previously reported sulfur-derived polymers with similar compositions, displayed significantly enhanced solvent resistance, glass transition temperature (T g ), and thermal stability attributed to the absence of long polysulfide chains in the polymer matrix. The resulting HRIP films displayed high transmittance over the entire visible range while showing an unprecedentedly high T g of 110 °C, which is one of the highest to date among HRIPs with refractive index (RI) exceeding 1.8 reported to date. With the combination of ultrahigh (>1.8) RI, thermal stability, and high T g , the HRIPs can serve as compelling materials for advanced optical applications.
Li-battery development, Li metal anodes have yet been applied to practical battery systems because of their unstable surface chemistry, which induces dendrite formation during the charge/discharge processes. Metallic Li itself is a strong reducing agent due to its high hydration enthalpy (−520 kJ mol −1 ), [2] so it readily reacts with electrolytes to form solidelectrolyte interphase (SEI) layers even without applying an electrical potential. [3] However, these layers are mechanically weak due to heterogeneous multigrain boundaries that easily crack upon the volume change of the Li metal anode. [4] The cracks generated in these layers allow Li to grow through them, exposing the fresh Li to electrolytes. As additional SEI layers spontaneously build upon the surface, the remaining liquid electrolytes are consumed to depletion (Figure S1, Supporting Information). Since the Li dendrites grow over the subsequent cycles by consuming Li metal and electrolytes into unavailing dead Li, Li metal batteries show poor coulombic efficiencies over a long time, short battery cycle life, and safety issues with the explosive dangers of lithium metal. [1a,5] One notable strategy that has been proposed to address these problems is the "artificial SEI layer" method, which involves modifying the Li surface with functional foreign layers to
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