Introduction To The Field of Polymer Ionics:: Definitions and Historical Development
Introduction To The Field of Polymer Ionics:: Definitions and Historical Development
polymer ionics:
Definitions and historical development
Prof. Dr. Agnieszka Pawlicka
Summary
1. Introduction to the field of polymer ionics
1.1. Definition of polymers and conductivity
1.2. Definition of polyelectrolytes, polymer electrolytes,
polymeric gels
1.3. Historical development
1.4. Current state of art in the field of polymer
electrolytes
Poly(ethylene oxide) systems, grafted, crosslinked,
plasticized and composite systems;
1.5. Advantages and disadvantages of different
systems
What are polymers ?
Polymers are composts formed by an almost regular repetition of units (atomic
groups) connected by chemical bonds which to form linear long chains or
branched, or three-dimensional net (polymerization) .
Monomer
What is a polymer?
What is a conduction?
Conduction is the movement of electrically charged particles through a
transmission medium (electrical conductor).
The movement of charge constitutes an electric current.
The charge transport may result as a response to an electric field, or as
a result of a concentration gradient in carrier density, that is, by
diffusion.
The physical parameters governing this transport depend upon the
material.
Electrical conduction
Heat conduction or thermal conduction is the spontaneous transfer of
thermal energy through matter, from a region of higher temperature to a region
of lower temperature, and hence acts to even out temperature differences.
Topics to cover
Metals, semiconductors, and insulators.
Band structure & electron conduction.
Electrical conductivity in metals.
Semiconducting materials.
Conducting polymers.
Ionic conduction & polymer electrolytes.
Electrical Conductivity in Materials
Metals: good conductors with electrical conductivity on the order of 10
7
-1
m
-1
(10
5
S/cm)
Metallic bonding leads to a sea of electrons that are free to move around.
Insulators: electrical conductivity ~ 10
-10
to 10
-20
-1
m
-1
.
Ionic or strong covalent bonds where valence electrons are tightly bound
(localized).
Semiconductors: electrical conductivity ~ 10
-6
to 10
4
-1
m
-1
.
Covalent (or predominantly covalent) bonds that are relatively weak
(valence electrons are not as tightly bound as in insulators).
Types of conductivity
electronic conduction: motion of electrons and/or holes (in most solid
materials).
ionic conduction: motion of charged atoms and/or molecules.
Metals, Semiconductors and Insulators
Electrical Conduction
Free electrons
needed for
electrical
conduction
(applied electric
field is sufficient to
generate large
number of free
electrons).
METALS
SEMICONDUCTORS OR INSULATORS
Due to the band
gap, much more
energy input is
necessary to create
charge carriers
(electrons in
conduction band or
holes in valence
band).
Fermi level
Fermi level" is the term used to describe the top of
the collection of electron energy levels at absolute
zero temperature.
This concept comes from Fermi-Dirac statistics.
Electrons are fermions and by the Pauli exclusion
principle cannot exist in identical energy states. So
at absolute zero they pack into the lowest available
energy states and build up a "Fermi sea" of electron
energy states.
The Fermi level is the surface of that sea at absolute
zero where no electrons will have enough energy to
rise above the surface. The concept of the Fermi
energy is a crucially important concept for the
understanding of the electrical and thermal
properties of solids.
Both ordinary electrical and thermal processes
involve energies of a small fraction of an electron
volt. But the Fermi energies of metals are on the
order of electron volts.
This implies that the vast majority of the electrons
cannot receive energy from those processes
because there are no available energy states for
them to go to within a fraction of an electron volt of
their present energy. Limited to a tiny depth of
energy, these interactions are limited to "ripples on
the Fermi sea".
Although the Fermi function has a finite value in the gap, there is no
electron population at those energies (that's what you mean by a
gap). The population depends upon the product of the Fermi function
and the electron density of states. So in the gap there are no
electrons because the density of states is zero. In the conduction
band at 0K, there are no electrons even though there are plenty of
available states, but the Fermi function is zero. At high temperatures,
both the density of states and the Fermi function have finite values in
the conduction band, so there is a finite conducting population.
The Fermi function f(E) gives the
probability that a given available
electron energy state will be
occupied at a given temperature.
The Fermi function comes from
Fermi-Dirac statistics and has the
form
Electrical conduction in
Semiconductors
Bonding and band gap
Structure m.p. (K) E
g
(eV)
C (Diamond) Diamond 3773 5.5
Si Diamond 1683 1.1
Ge Diamond 1210 0.7
Need to create free electrons (or holes) for electrical
conduction.
The smaller the band gap, the less energy is
required to create charge carriers.
Conductivity of intrinsic (undoped) semiconductors:
|
|
.
|
\
|
kT
E
g
exp o
Conductivity increases with T.
What is a conducting polymer?
Conjugated polymers: long conjugated systems;
Energy states related with structural defects
Defects are caused by alterations in the molecular geometry and in the charges distribution.
What are conducting polymers ?
Quasi-particles doping
Delocalization
OBS: The carriers not are electrons neither holes
localized in the interior of bands but are charged
defects, localized long the polymeric chain.
Conjugated Polymers:
Organic semiconductors with t-bonds delocalizing along the polymer chain
Conjugated Polymers
Synthetic Metals
go
Quasi-particles
The use of term quasiparticle seems to be ambiguous.
Some authors use the term in order to distinguish them from real particles, others to describe
an excitation similar to a single particle excitation as opposed to a collective excitation.
Both definitions mutually exclude each other as with the former definition collective
excitations which are no "real" particles are considered to be quasiparticles. The problems
arising from the collective nature of quasiparticles have also been discussed within the
philosophy of science, notably in relation to the identity conditions of quasiparticles and
whether or not they should be considered "real" by the standards of, for example, entity
realism.
Phonons are the quanta of classical sound waves and sound waves do not need the
notion of atoms.
Magnons are the quanta of classical spinwaves, which also do not need elementary
spins.
Photons inside an isolator are the quanta of classical dressed electromagnetic waves
and do not need the notion of electrons for the definition of the refractive index.
Plasmons are the quanta of the plasma oscillations and they only need charge
density and mass density and no electrons or ions.
Polarons are the quanta of the oscillating polarization in a lightly doped
semiconductor and also do not need elementary charge or mass.
eParticles in physics
Elementary particles
Fermions: Quarks: u d c s t b Leptons: e
-
e
+
-
+
-
+
e
Bosons: Gauge bosons: g W
Z
0
Other: Ghosts
Composite particles
Hadrons: Baryons(list)/Hyperons/Nucleons: p n
b
Mesons(list)/Quarkonia: K
J/
Other: Atomic nuclei Atoms Exotic atoms: Positronium Molecules
Hypothetical
elementary particles
Superpartners: Axino Dilatino Chargino Gluino Gravitino Higgsino Neutralino Sfermion Slepton
Squark
Other: Axion Dilaton Goldstone boson Graviton Higgs boson Tachyon X Y W' Z'
Hypothetical
composite particles
Exotic hadrons: Exotic baryons: Pentaquark Exotic mesons: Glueball Tetraquark
Other: Mesonic molecule
Quasiparticles Davydov soliton Exciton Magnon Phonon Plasmon Polariton Polaron
How good is the conductivity of
polymers, compared to metals
Electrolytes short description
Ionic conducting electrolytes with low
electronic conductivity
Solids, liquids or elastomers
Liquid electrolytes are preferred
liquids with high viscosity due to the
convenience or security
Liquid Electrolytes
Electric currents in electrolytes are flows of electrically charged
atoms (ions).
Classical example of NaCl
if an electric field is placed across a solution of Na
+
and Cl