Formulation and Characterization of Biopolymer for Solid-State Electrolytes
dc.contributor.advisor | Aravamudhan, Shyam | |
dc.contributor.advisor | Rathnayake, Hemali | |
dc.contributor.author | Alzahrani, Turki | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-07-23T17:01:33Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2026 | |
dc.description.abstract | Flammable organic electrolytes and narrow oxidative stability still prevent next-generation solid state lithium-ion batteries from using high-voltage cathodes with sustainable polymers. This dissertation addresses this problem by developing a bio-sourced, chitosan-based solid polymer electrolyte reinforced with a tannic-acid–lithium metal–organic framework (TALi). The TALi is novel because it combines phenolic anchoring sites from tannic acid with lithium coordination, creating both Li⁺ binding sites and mesoscale porosity in a single additive. Casting 4:1 chitosan:TALi films followed by controlled protonation produces dense 120 µm membranes with room-temperature ionic conductivity of 4.38 × 10⁻⁴ S cm⁻¹ about 12 times higher than pure chitosan. Conductivity increases to 1.90 × 10⁻³ S cm⁻¹ at 80 °C with an activation energy of 0.252 eV. Linear-sweep voltammetry shows practical stability up to ≈ 4.9 V vs Li/Li⁺ at 0.10 mA cm⁻². Li ‖ 4:1 film ‖ NMC 532 coin cells deliver 127 mAh g⁻¹ at C/20 (85% of liquid-electrolyte capacity) and retain 109 mAh g⁻¹ after 34 cycles with 93–95% coulombic efficiency, giving a fade rate of 0.06% per cycle. Rate tests show 56.8 mAh g⁻¹ at C/5 and 98% capacity recovery when returned to C/20. Spectroscopic and dielectric analyses show the high conductivity comes from dual Li⁺ transport pathways. These include segmental motion along protonated chitosan chains and vacancy-assisted hopping across catecholate sites in the MOF. Maxwell–Wagner polarization inside 50–200 nm pores also increases free-ion density. A percolation optimum near 20 wt% TALi balances conductivity, mechanical properties, and electrochemical window. This work demonstrates a practical approach toward safer, high-voltage, bio-derived electrolytes using scalable solution processing methods | |
dc.format.extent | 210 | |
dc.identifier.citation | IEEE | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14154/75956 | |
dc.language.iso | en_US | |
dc.publisher | Saudi Digital Library | |
dc.subject | Nanostructured Battery Materials | |
dc.subject | Polymer Solid-State Electrolyte | |
dc.subject | Lithium-Ion Coin Cell | |
dc.subject | Lithium Metal-Organic Framework (Li-MOF) | |
dc.subject | Ionic Conductivity Enhancement | |
dc.title | Formulation and Characterization of Biopolymer for Solid-State Electrolytes | |
dc.type | Thesis | |
sdl.degree.department | Nanoengineering | |
sdl.degree.discipline | Nanoengineering | |
sdl.degree.grantor | North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University | |
sdl.degree.name | Doctor of Philosophy |