Issue 4, 2022

Electrolyte design implications of ion-pairing in low-temperature Li metal batteries

Abstract

Lithium metal batteries are capable of pushing cell energy densities beyond what is currently achievable with commercial Li-ion cells and are the ideal technology for supplying power to electronic devices at low temperatures (≤−20 °C). To minimize the thermal management requirements of these devices, batteries capable of both charging and discharging at these temperatures are highly desirable. Here, we report >4 V Li metal full cell batteries (N/P = 2) capable of hundreds of stable cycles down to −40 °C, unambiguously enabled by the introduction of cation/anion pairs in the electrolyte. Via controlled experimental and computational investigations in electrolytes employing 1,2-dimethoxyethane as the solvating solvent, we observed distinct performance transitions in low temperature electrochemical performance, coincident with a shift in the Li+ binding environment. The performance advantages of heavily ion-paired electrolytes were found to apply to both the cathode and anode, providing Li metal Coulombic efficiencies of 98.9, 98.5, and 96.9% at −20, −40, and −60 °C, respectively, while improving the oxidative stability in support of >4 V cathodes. This work reveals a strong correlation between ion-pairing and low-temperature performance while providing a viable route to Li metal full batteries cycling under extreme conditions.

Graphical abstract: Electrolyte design implications of ion-pairing in low-temperature Li metal batteries

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Nov 2021
Accepted
03 Mar 2022
First published
07 Mar 2022

Energy Environ. Sci., 2022,15, 1647-1658

Author version available

Electrolyte design implications of ion-pairing in low-temperature Li metal batteries

J. Holoubek, K. Kim, Y. Yin, Z. Wu, H. Liu, M. Li, A. Chen, H. Gao, G. Cai, T. A. Pascal, P. Liu and Z. Chen, Energy Environ. Sci., 2022, 15, 1647 DOI: 10.1039/D1EE03422G

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