| Literature DB >> 35480423 |
Faisal I Chowdhury1,2, Jahidul Islam1, A K Arof2, M U Khandaker3, Hossain M Zabed4, Ibrahim Khalil5, M Rezaur Rahman6, Shahidul M Islam7, M Razaul Karim8, Jamal Uddin9.
Abstract
In this study, gel polymer electrolytes (GPEs) were prepared using polyacrylonitrile (PAN) polymer, ethylene carbonate (EC), propylene carbonate (PC) plasticizers and different compositions of tetrapropylammonium iodide (TPAI) salt. Linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) measurements were done using non-blocking Pt-electrode symmetric cells. The limiting current (J lim), apparent diffusion coefficient of triiodide ions and exchange current were found to be 12.76 mA cm-2, 23.41 × 10-7 cm2 s-1 and 11.22-14.24 mA cm-2, respectively, for the GPE containing 30% TPAI. These values are the highest among the GPEs with different TPAI contents. To determine the ionic conductivity, the EIS technique was employed with blocking electrodes. The GPE containing 30% TPAI exhibited the lowest bulk impedance, R b (22 Ω), highest ionic conductivity (3.62 × 10-3 S cm-1) and lowest activation energy. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction (XRD) techniques were utilized for structural characterization. Functional group interactions among PAN, EC, PC and TPAI were studied in the FTIR spectra of the GPEs. An up-shift of the XRD peak indicates the polymer-salt interaction and possible complexation of the cation (TPA+ ion) with the lone pair of electrons containing site -C[triple bond, length as m-dash]N at the N atom in the host polymer matrix. On the other hand, computational study shows that TPAI-PAN based GPE possesses the lowest frontier orbital bandgap, which coincided with the enhanced electrochemical and electrocatalytic performance of GPE. The dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC) fabricated with these GPEs showed that the J SC (19.75 mA cm-2) and V OC (553.8 mV) were the highest among the GPEs and hence the highest efficiency, η (4.76%), was obtained for the same electrolytes. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35480423 PMCID: PMC9034273 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra01983j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Chemical structures of PAN, EC, PC and TPAI
| Chemicals | Chemical formula | Chemical structures | Company |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polyacrylonitrile (PAN) | [–CH2–CH(CN)–] |
| Sigma-Aldrich |
| Ethylene carbonate (EC) | (CH2O)2CO |
| Sigma-Aldrich |
| Propylene carbonate (PC) | CH3C2H3O2CO |
| Sigma-Aldrich |
| Tetrapropylammonium iodide (TPAI) | (CH3CH2CH2)4+I− |
| Sigma-Aldrich |
Compositions of PAN based GPEs
| % TPAI | PAN (g) | EC (g) | PC (g) | TPAI (g) | I2 (g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 0.4 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 0.50 | 0.034 |
| 20 | 0.4 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.00 | 0.069 |
| 30 | 0.4 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 1.50 | 0.103 |
| 40 | 0.4 | 1.5 | 1.5 | 2.00 | 0.137 |
Fig. 3Nyquist plots of the dummy cells were fabricated with two identical Pt-ultramicroelectrodes with different percentages of TPAI salt containing GPEs.
Bulk impedance and conductivity for the GPEs with different TPAI content
| TPAI |
| Conductivity, | Activation energy, |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | 2900 | 2.74 × 10−5 | 19.94 |
| 10% | 42.0 | 1.89 × 10−3 | 11.73 |
| 20% | 36.0 | 2.21 × 10−3 | 11.11 |
| 30% | 22.0 | 3.62 × 10−3 | 10.09 |
| 40% | 30.0 | 3.26 × 10−3 | 11.12 |
Limiting current or steady-state current (Jlim), diffusion coefficients of I3− ion , charge-transfer resistance (Rct) and exchange current density (J0) of GPEs containing different composition of iodine. J0,EIS and J0,Tafel have been calculated from EIS and Tafel polarization curves, respectively
| TPAI | 10% | 20% | 30% | 40% |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I2 (g) | 0.018 | 0.035 | 0.051 | 0.069 |
|
| 4.46 | 6.32 | 12.76 | 11.29 |
|
| 9.15 | 12.23 | 23.41 | 19.67 |
|
| 22.60 | 21.50 | 20.40 | 20.60 |
|
| 10.00 | 9.20 | 3.80 | 5.10 |
|
| 20.20 | 20.00 | 14.60 | 19.00 |
|
| 5.41 | 5.88 | 14.24 | 10.61 |
|
| 3.98 | 5.62 | 11.22 | 10.00 |
Fig. 1Linear sweep voltammograms (LSV) of GPEs at varying concentration of TBAI with Pt ultramicroelectrode. Scan rate: 10 mV s−1.
Fig. 4Nyquist plot for the PAN-EC-PC-TPAI-I2 GPE with (i) 0% and (ii) 30% TPAI.
Fig. 2Tafel polarization curves for the electrolytes with different TPAI containing GPEs.
Fig. 5Conductivity (σ × 104 (S cm−1)) versus temperature (T/K).
Fig. 6FTIR spectra of pure PAN powder.
FTIR peak assignment for PAN, EC, PC, TPAI and GPE
| Component | Wavenumber (cm−1) | Assignments | Literature |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAN | 2937 | C–H asymmetrical stretching of –CH2– groups |
|
| 2244 | C |
| |
| 1621 | O–H bending of the absorbed water |
| |
| 1454 | C–H bending of –CH2– groups |
| |
| 1358 | C–H bending of CH groups + C–H wagging of –CH2–groups |
| |
| 1073 | C–C symmetrical stretching of C–CN |
| |
| EC | 2931 | CH2 stretching |
|
| 1866 | C |
| |
| 1484 | CH2 scissoring/CH2 bending |
| |
| 1420 | CH2 wagging |
| |
| 1392 | CH2 wagging |
| |
| 1218 | CH2 twisting |
| |
| 1218 | CH2 twisting |
| |
| 1158 | CH2 twisting/skeletal stretching |
| |
| 1071 | Ring stretching/ring breathing |
| |
| 970 | Ring stretching/skeletal stretching |
| |
| 891 | Ring breathing |
| |
| 770 | CH2 rocking |
| |
| 714 | C |
| |
| PC | 2931 | CH2 stretching |
|
| 1781 | C |
| |
| 1485 | CH2 scissoring/CH2 bending |
| |
| 1388 | CH2 wagging |
| |
| 1175 | CH2 twisting/skeletal stretching |
| |
| 1117 | COC asymmetrical vibration |
| |
| 1071 | Ring stretching/ring breathing |
| |
| 1045 | (CO3)2− symmetric stretching vibration |
| |
| 970 | Ring stretching/skeletal stretching |
| |
| 891 | Ring breathing |
| |
| 775 | CH2 rocking |
| |
| 710 | C |
| |
| GPEs | 2964 | CH2 asymmetrical stretching vibrations (up-shifting from 2937 cm−1) | |
| 1789 | C | ||
| 1772 | C | ||
| 1480 | CH2 scissoring/CH2 bending (down-shifted from 1485 cm−1) | ||
| 1389 | CH2 wagging (down-shifted from 1392 cm−1) | ||
| 1354 | C–H bending of CH groups + C–H wagging of –CH2– groups (down-shifted from 1358 cm−1) | ||
| 1159 | CH2 twisting/skeletal stretching (down-shifted from 1178 cm−1) | ||
| 1118 | C–C–C bending (up-shifted from 1109 cm−1) | ||
| 1051 | C–C symmetrical stretching of C–CN (down-shifted from 1073 cm−1) |
Fig. 7FTIR spectra of (i) EC and (ii) PC.
Fig. 8FTIR spectra of (i) PAN, (ii) EC, (iii) PC, (iv) TPAI, (v) 10% TPAI, (vi) 20% TPAI, (vii) 30% TPAI, (viii) 40% TPAI.
Fig. 9XRD pattern of PAN and PAN-EC-PC-0% TPAIGPE.
Fig. 10XRD pattern of (i) PAN-EC-PC-10% TPAI-I2, (ii) PAN-EC-PC-20% TPAI-I2, (iii) PAN-EC-PC-30% TPAI-I2 and (iv) PAN-EC-PC-40% TPAI-I2 GPEs.
Fig. 11Optimized structures of, (a) PAN, (b) PAN-one, (c) TPAI only, (d) TPAI-PAN, and (e) TPAI-PAN-one.
Fig. 12HOMO–LUMO band gap energies of, (a) PAN, (b) PAN-one, (c) TPAI-only, (d) TPAI-PAN-one only, and (e) TPAI-PAN.