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Dive into the research topics where Peng-Fei Cao is active.

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Featured researches published by Peng-Fei Cao.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Effect of Binder Architecture on the Performance of Silicon/Graphite Composite Anodes for Lithium Ion Batteries

Peng-Fei Cao; Michael Naguib; Zhijia Du; Eric W. Stacy; Bingrui Li; Tao Hong; Kunyue Xing; Dmitry Voylov; Jianlin Li; David L. Wood; Alexei P. Sokolov; Jagjit Nanda; Tomonori Saito

Although significant progress has been made in improving cycling performance of silicon-based electrodes, few studies have been performed on the architecture effect on polymer binder performance for lithium-ion batteries. A systematic study on the relationship between polymer architectures and binder performance is especially useful in designing synthetic polymer binders. Herein, a graft block copolymer with readily tunable architecture parameters is synthesized and tested as the polymer binder for the high-mass loading silicon (15 wt %)/graphite (73 wt %) composite electrode (active materials >2.5 mg/cm2). With the same chemical composition and functional group ratio, the graft block copolymer reveals improved cycling performance in both capacity retention (495 mAh/g vs 356 mAh/g at 100th cycle) and Coulombic efficiency (90.3% vs 88.1% at first cycle) than the physical mixing of glycol chitosan (GC) and lithium polyacrylate (LiPAA). Galvanostatic results also demonstrate the significant impacts of different architecture parameters of graft copolymers, including grafting density and side chain length, on their ultimate binder performance. By simply changing the side chain length of GC-g-LiPAA, the retaining delithiation capacity after 100 cycles varies from 347 mAh/g to 495 mAh/g.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017

Influence of Chain Rigidity and Dielectric Constant on the Glass Transition Temperature in Polymerized Ionic Liquids

Vera Bocharova; Z. Wojnarowska; Peng-Fei Cao; Yao Fu; Rajeev Kumar; Bingrui Li; Vladimir Novikov; Sheng Zhao; Alexander Kisliuk; Tomonori Saito; Jimmy W. Mays; Bobby G. Sumpter; Alexei P. Sokolov

Polymerized ionic liquids (PolyILs) are promising candidates for a wide range of technological applications due to their single ion conductivity and good mechanical properties. Tuning the glass transition temperature (Tg) in these materials constitutes a major strategy to improve room temperature conductivity while controlling their mechanical properties. In this work, we show experimental and simulation results demonstrating that in these materials Tg does not follow a universal scaling behavior with the volume of the structural units Vm (including monomer and counterion). Instead, Tg is significantly influenced by the chain flexibility and polymer dielectric constant. We propose a simplified empirical model that includes the electrostatic interactions and chain flexibility to describe Tg in PolyILs. Our model enables design of new functional PolyILs with the desired Tg.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Robust and Elastic Polymer Membranes with Tunable Properties for Gas Separation

Peng-Fei Cao; Bingrui Li; Tao Hong; Kunyue Xing; Dmitry Voylov; Shiwang Cheng; Panchao Yin; Alexander Kisliuk; Shannon M. Mahurin; Alexei P. Sokolov; Tomonori Saito

Polymer membranes with the capability to process a massive volume of gas are especially attractive for practical applications of gas separation. Although much effort has been devoted to develop novel polymer membranes with increased selectivity, the overall gas-separation performance and lifetime of membrane are still negatively affected by the weak mechanical performance, low plasticization resistance and poor physical aging tolerance. Recently, elastic polymer membranes with tunable mechanical properties have been attracting significant attentions due to their tremendous potential applications. Herein, we report a series of urethane-rich PDMS-based polymer networks (U-PDMS-NW) with improved mechanical performance for gas separation. The cross-link density of U-PDMS-NWs is tailored by varying the molecular weight (Mn) of PDMS. The U-PDMS-NWs show up to 400% elongation and tunable Youngs modulus (1.3-122.2 MPa), ultimate tensile strength (1.1-14.3 MPa), and toughness (0.7-24.9 MJ/m3). All of the U-PDMS-NWs exhibit salient gas-separation performance with excellent thermal resistance and aging tolerance, high gas permeability (>100 Barrer), and tunable gas selectivity (up to α[PCO2/PN2] ≈ 41 and α[PCO2/PCH4] ≈ 16). With well-controlled mechanical properties and gas-separation performance, these U-PDMS-NW can be used as a polymer-membrane platform not only for gas separation but also for other applications such as microfluidic channels and stretchable electronic devices.


Soft Matter | 2018

Hydrogen-bond strength changes network dynamics in associating telechelic PDMS

Kunyue Xing; Martin Tress; Peng-Fei Cao; Shiwang Cheng; Tomonori Saito; Vladimir Novikov; Alexei P. Sokolov

Associating polymers are a class of materials with widely tunable macroscopic properties. Here, we investigate telechelic poly(dimethylsiloxanes) of several molecular weights (MW) with different hydrogen bonding end groups. Besides the well-established increase of the glass transition temperature Tg with decreasing MW, Tg remains unchanged as the end group varies from NH2 over OH to COOH. For the latter system, a 2nd Tg is found which indicates a segregated phase. In contrast, rheological measurements reveal a qualitative difference in the viscoelastic response of NH2-terminated and COOH-terminated chains. Both systems show clear signs of end group association, but only the latter exhibits an extended rubbery plateau. All features observed in the rheology experiments have corresponding processes in the dielectric measurements. This provides insight into the underlying molecular mechanisms, and especially reveals that many end groups of the COOH-terminated chains phase segregate while a certain fraction forms binary associates and remains non-segregated. In contrast, the NH2-terminated systems form only binary associates increasing the effective chain length, whereas the COOH-terminated system consists of two types of associates forming a crosslinked network. Remarkably, a single species of end group forms two qualitatively different types of associates: transient bonds which allow stress release by a bond-partner exchange mechanism, and effectively permanent bonds formed by a phase segregated fraction of end groups which are stable on the timescale of the transient mechanism.


Polymer | 2017

A star-shaped single lithium-ion conducting copolymer by grafting a POSS nanoparticle

Peng-Fei Cao; Zaneta Wojnarowska; Tao Hong; Bobby Carroll; Bingrui Li; Hongbo Feng; Leo Parsons; Weiyu Wang; Bradley S. Lokitz; Shiwang Cheng; Vera Bocharova; Alexei P. Sokolov; Tomonori Saito


Journal of Power Sources | 2018

What makes lithium substituted polyacrylic acid a better binder than polyacrylic acid for silicon-graphite composite anodes?

Kevin A. Hays; Rose E. Ruther; Alexander J. Kukay; Peng-Fei Cao; Tomonori Saito; David L. Wood; Jianlin Li


Macromolecules | 2018

The Role of Chain-End Association Lifetime in Segmental and Chain Dynamics of Telechelic Polymers

Kunyue Xing; Martin Tress; Peng-Fei Cao; Fei Fan; Shiwang Cheng; Tomonori Saito; Alexei P. Sokolov


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Unexpected Effect of Small Nanoparticles: A Paradigm Shift for Polymer Nanocomposites

Shiwang Cheng; Shijie Xie; Jan-Michael Y. Carrillo; Halie Martin; Peng-Fei Cao; Mark D. Dadmun; Bobby G. Sumpter; Vladimir Novikov; Kenneth S. Schweizer; Alexei P. Sokolov


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Network formation and molecular dynamics in hydrogen-bonding telechelic polymers: a competition between association lifetime and structural relaxation

Martin Tress; Kunyue Xing; Peng-Fei Cao; Shiwang Cheng; Tomonori Saito; Vladimir Novikov; Alexei P. Sokolov


Advanced Sustainable Systems | 2018

Carbon Dioxide Separation: Highly Permeable Oligo(ethylene oxide)‐co‐poly(dimethylsiloxane) Membranes for Carbon Dioxide Separation (Adv. Sustainable Syst. 4/2018)

Tao Hong; Sophia Lai; Shannon M. Mahurin; Peng-Fei Cao; Dmitry Voylov; Harry M. Meyer; Christopher B. Jacobs; Jan-Michael Y. Carrillo; Alexander Kisliuk; Ilia N. Ivanov; De-en Jiang; Brian K. Long; Jimmy W. Mays; Alexei P. Sokolov; Tomonori Saito

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Alexei P. Sokolov

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Tomonori Saito

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Shiwang Cheng

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Kunyue Xing

University of Tennessee

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Bingrui Li

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Tao Hong

University of Tennessee

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Alexander Kisliuk

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Bobby G. Sumpter

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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