Ion transport in helical-helical polypeptide polymerized ionic liquid block copolymers

POSTER

Abstract

Helical-helical polypeptide polymerized ionic liquid block copolymers (PPIL BCPs) were designed to investigate the role of helical secondary structure on self-assembly and ionic conductivity. PPIL BCPs, consisting of a cationic polypeptide (PTPLG) with varying lengths and a neutral poly-(γ-benzyl-L-glutamate) (PBLG) block with fixed length, exhibited stable helical conformations over a broad temperature range, and less than 5 K variation in glass transition (Tg) with composition. X-ray scattering confirmed microphase separation, and morphological evolution of PBLG-b-PTPLG films revealed a transition from poorly ordered to highly ordered lamellar (LAM) structures as PIL composition increased. The highest PIL content BCP formed a highly ordered bilayer LAM structure with close-packed helices and a 1.5 order of magnitude higher ionic conductivity after normalization by Tg and volume fraction. The morphology factor (f), which is 2/3 for ideal lamellae, was f > 0.8 compared to less ordered PPIL BCPs with f < 0.05. These results highlight the critical role of ordered nanoscale ionic domain, connectivity, confinement and helical structure in enhancing ion transport. This innovative approach of incorporating helical peptide structures into BCP electrolytes provides new insights into the relationship between helical conformation, self-assembly and ionic conductivity, offering a promising avenue for developing high-performance solid electrolytes.

*This work is supported by United States National Science Foundation (NSF DMR-1751291 to C.M.E. and DMR-2210590 to Y.L.). The authors acknowledge the facility and instrumental support from the Materials Research Laboratory and the SCS NMR Laboratory, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The authors thank the 16ID-LiX beamline at the NSLS-II (Brookhaven National Lab) through a beamtime proposal (BAG-302208).

Publication: Ion transport in helical-helical polypeptide polymerized ionic liquid block copolymers, submitted.

Presenters

  • Yingying Chen

    • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Authors

  • Yingying Chen

    • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Tianjian Yang

    • University of Connecticut
  • Yao Lin

    • University of Connecticut
  • Christopher M Evans

    • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
    • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign