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      A Lithium‐Salt‐Free, Hydrophobic, Solid‐State Poly(Ionic Liquid) Electrolyte Enables Rapid Assembly of Unencapsulated, Removable Electrochromic “Window Tint Film”

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          Abstract

          Electrochromic technology that enables modulation of a material's optical properties by application of an applied voltage is utilized in smart windows. However, avoiding water absorption by lithium salt in the electrolyte necessitates complex encapsulated device assemblies that must be constructed under strict atmosphere conditions and are largely unrepairable. Herein, a lithium‐salt‐free, hydrophobic, solid‐state poly(ionic liquid) electrolyte based on strong C─F bonds that exhibits low polarizability, low moisture absorption, and a wide electrochemical window, allowing the fabrication of unencapsulated electrochromic devices with outstanding long‐term cycling and environmental stability are presented. Intimate contact between the electrolyte and the electrode is achieved through integrated in situ polymerization, providing an interface with multiple molecular interactions that impart robust adhesion, efficient ion transport, and excellent stability. To demonstrate the potential of this electrolyte for cost‐effective electrochromic smart windows, low‐cost (≈110 USD m −2), unencapsulated, removable, electrochromic “window tint film” with customizable dimensions and shapes are fabricated.

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          Single-ion BAB triblock copolymers as highly efficient electrolytes for lithium-metal batteries.

          Electrochemical energy storage is one of the main societal challenges of this century. The performances of classical lithium-ion technology based on liquid electrolytes have made great advances in the past two decades, but the intrinsic instability of liquid electrolytes results in safety issues. Solid polymer electrolytes would be a perfect solution to those safety issues, miniaturization and enhancement of energy density. However, as in liquids, the fraction of charge carried by lithium ions is small (<20%), limiting the power performances. Solid polymer electrolytes operate at 80 °C, resulting in poor mechanical properties and a limited electrochemical stability window. Here we describe a multifunctional single-ion polymer electrolyte based on polyanionic block copolymers comprising polystyrene segments. It overcomes most of the above limitations, with a lithium-ion transport number close to unity, excellent mechanical properties and an electrochemical stability window spanning 5 V versus Li(+)/Li. A prototype battery using this polyelectrolyte outperforms a conventional battery based on a polymer electrolyte.
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            Self-healing electronic skins for aquatic environments

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              Frontiers in poly(ionic liquid)s: syntheses and applications.

              We review recent works on the synthesis and application of poly(ionic liquid)s (PILs). Novel chemical structures, different synthetic strategies and controllable morphologies are introduced as a supplement to PIL systems already reported. The primary properties determining applications, such as ionic conductivity, aqueous solubility, thermodynamic stability and electrochemical/chemical durability, are discussed. Furthermore, the near-term applications of PILs in multiple fields, such as their use in electrochemical energy materials, stimuli-responsive materials, carbon materials, and antimicrobial materials, in catalysis, in sensors, in absorption and in separation materials, as well as several special-interest applications, are described in detail. We also discuss the limitations of PIL applications, efforts to improve PIL physics, and likely future developments.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Advanced Functional Materials
                Adv Funct Materials
                Wiley
                1616-301X
                1616-3028
                March 2024
                December 08 2023
                March 2024
                : 34
                : 12
                Affiliations
                [1 ] State Key Laboratory for Modification of Chemical Fibers and Polymer Materials College of Materials Science and Engineering Donghua University Shanghai 201620 China
                [2 ] Engineering Research Center of Advanced Glasses Manufacturing Technology, Ministry of Education Donghua University Shanghai 201620 China
                Article
                10.1002/adfm.202312358
                95288806-f75e-4e45-a4d9-9e16bd7e52a1
                © 2024

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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