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null (Ed.)We report a partial elucidation of the relationship between polymer polarity and ionic conductivity in polymer electrolyte mixtures comprising a homologous series of nine poly(vinyl ether)s (PVEs) and lithium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide. Recent simulation studies have suggested that low dielectric polymer hosts with glass transition temperatures far below ambient conditions are expected to have ionic conductivity limited by salt solubility and dissociation. In contrast, high dielectric hosts are expected to have the potential for high ion solubility but slow segmental dynamics due to strong polymer–polymer and polymer–ion interactions. We report results for PVEs in the low polarity regime with dielectric constants of about 1.3 to 9.0. Ionic conductivity measured for the PVE and salt mixtures ranged from about 10–10 to 10–3 S/cm. In agreement with the predictions from computer simulations, the ionic conductivity increased with dielectric constant and plateaued as the dielectric approached 9.0, comparable to the dielectric constant of the widely used poly(ethylene oxide).more » « less
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Abstract Block polyethers comprised of poly(propylene oxide) (PPO) and poly(ethylene oxide) (PEG or PEO) segments form the basis of ABA‐type PEO‐b‐PPO‐b‐PEO poloxamer materials. The inverse architecture with an internal hydrophilic PEO segment flanked by hydrophobic blocks can be difficult to prepare with control of architecture by use of traditional anionic polymerization. These oxyanionic polymerizations are plagued by chain‐transfer‐to‐monomer side reactions that occur with substituted epoxides such as propylene oxide (PO). Herein, we report a new method for the preparation of block polymers through a controlled polymerization involving a N‐Al Lewis adduct catalyst and an aluminum alkoxide macroinitiator. The Lewis pair catalyst was able to chain‐extend commercial PEO macroinitiators to prepare di‐, tri‐, and pentablock polyethers with low dispersity and reasonable monomer tolerance. Chain extension was confirmed using size exclusion chromatography and diffusion ordered nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The resulting block polymers were additionally analyzed with small‐angle X‐ray scattering to correlate the morphology to molecular architecture.more » « less
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