April 22 - 26, 2024
Seattle, Washington
May 7 - 9, 2024 (Virtual)
Symposium Supporters
2024 MRS Spring Meeting
SB11.02.04

Ultra-Tough Ionogels for Stretchable Ionic Devices

When and Where

Apr 23, 2024
2:30pm - 3:00pm
Room 430, Level 4, Summit

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

Michael Dickey1,Meixiang Wang1

North Carolina State University1

Abstract

Michael Dickey1,Meixiang Wang1

North Carolina State University1
Ionogels are compelling materials for energy storage devices, ionotronics, and actuators due to their excellent ionic conductivity, thermal and electrochemical stability and nonvolatility. However, most existing ionogels suffer from low strength and toughness. Here, we report a simple one-step method to achieve ultra-tough and stretchable ionogels by randomly copolymerizing two common monomers in ionic liquid. Copolymerization leads to a single covalent network with controllable polymer- and solvent-rich phases that form in situ due to the phase behavior of the polymer in ionic liquid. The polymer-rich phase forms hydrogen bonds that dissipate energy and thereby toughen the ionogel during extension, while the solvent-rich phase remains elastic to enable large strain. The copolymer ionogels composed of acrylamide and acrylic acid exhibit extraordinary mechanical properties, including fracture strength (12.6 MPa), fracture energy (~24 kJ m-2), and Young’s modulus (46.5 MPa), setting new records among reported ionogels. The tough ionogels are highly stretchable (~600% strain) and possess good self-recovery, as well as excellent self-healing and shape-memory properties. This concept extends to other monomers and ionic liquids, which offers a promising and general way to tune microstructure in situ during one-step polymerization that solves the longstanding mechanical challenges in ionogels.

Symposium Organizers

Artur Braun, Empa
Minkyu Kim, The University of Arizona
Danielle Mai, Stanford University
Newayemedhin Tegegne, Addis Ababa University

Session Chairs

Minkyu Kim
Rong Yang

In this Session