Publications by authors named "R Bouchet"

New battery technologies are currently under development, and among them, all-solid-state batteries should deliver better electrochemical performance and enhanced safety. Composite solid electrolytes, combining a solid polymer electrolyte (SPE) and a ceramic electrolyte (CE), should then provide high ionic conductivity coupled to high mechanical stability. To date, this synergy has not yet been reached due to the complexity of the Li-ion transport within the hybrid solid electrolyte, especially at the SPE/CE interface currently considered the limiting step.

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New single-ion hybrid electrolytes have been synthetized via an original and simple synthetic approach combining Michael addition, epoxidation, and sol-gel polycondensation. We designed an organic PEO network as a matrix for the lithium transport, mechanically reinforced thanks to crosslinking inorganic (SiO) sites, while highly delocalized anions based on lithium vinyl sulfonyl(trifluoromethane sulfonyl)imide (VSTFSILi) were grafted onto the inorganic sites to produce single-ion hybrid electrolytes (HySI). The influence of the electrolyte composition in terms of the inorganic/organic ratio and the grafted VSTFSILi content on the local structural organization, the thermal, mechanical, and ionic transport properties (ionic conductivity, transference number) are studied by a variety of techniques including SAXS, DSC, rheometry, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy.

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Solid-state batteries are seen as key to the development of safer and higher-energy-density batteries, by limiting flammability and enabling the use of the lithium metal anode, respectively. Composite polymer-ceramic electrolytes are a possible solution for their realization, by benefiting from the combined mechanical properties of the polymer electrolyte and the thermal stability and high conductivity of the ceramic electrolyte. In this study we used different liquid electrolyte chemistries as models for the polymer electrolytes, and evaluated the effect of adding a variety of porous and dense ceramic electrolytes on the conductivity.

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Solid-state batteries are seen as a possible revolutionary technology, with increased safety and energy density compared to their liquid-electrolyte-based counterparts. Composite polymer/ceramic electrolytes are candidates of interest to develop a reliable solid-state battery due to the potential synergy between the organic (softness ensuring good interfaces) and inorganic (high ionic transport) material properties. Multilayers made of a polymer/ceramic/polymer assembly are model composite electrolytes to investigate ionic charge transport and transfer.

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The coupling protocols combining photoemission spectroscopy and other characterization methods such as electrochemical, electrical, optical, thermal, or magnetic paved the way to considerable progress in the field of materials science. Access to complementary data on the same object is relevant, but in the vast majority of cases, it is carried out sequentially and separately. This raises the complex question of the equivalence of the analyzed surfaces subjected to these different characterizations.

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