4.7 Article

Ab initio study of EMIM-BF4 crystal interaction with a Li (100) surface as a model for ionic liquid/Li interfaces in Li-ion batteries

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 131, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/1.3273087

Keywords

ab initio calculations; adhesion; adsorption; APW calculations; crystal structure; density functional theory; electrochemical electrodes; electrolytes; electronic structure; lithium; organic compounds; secondary cells; wetting

Funding

  1. MEXT, Japan

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We examined the atomic and electronic structures of an interface between a 1-ethyl-3-methyl imidazolium tetrafluoroborate (EMIM-BF4) ionic-liquid crystal and a Li(100) surface by periodic density-functional calculations, as a model for a room-temperature ionic-liquid (RTIL) electrolyte/Li interface at a Li-ion battery electrode. Results are compared with our previous theoretical study of the EMIM-BF4 molecular adsorption on Li surfaces [H. Valencia , Phys. Rev. B 78, 205402 (2008)]. For the EMIM-BF4 crystal structure, the present projector augmented wave scheme with the generalized gradient approximation can reproduce rather correct intramolecular structures as well as satisfactory short-ranged intermolecular distances, while long-range intermolecular distances are overestimated due to the lack of correct description of long-range dispersive interactions. We constructed a coherent crystal/crystal interface model where four EMIM-BF4 pairs are stacked on a p(4x3) Li (100) surface cell so as to simulate RTIL-layer deposition on a Li surface. We observed significant attraction of surface Li ions toward contacting BF4- anions, counterbalanced by electron transfer toward EMIM+ cations near the interface, revealing the tendency of easy ionization of Li and Li-x-BF4 cluster formation, coupled with the reduction of EMIM+. These features are similar to those observed in the EMIM-BF4 molecular adsorption, while these have been proved to occur in the crystal-layer adsorption. We examined the adhesive energy, wetability, and detailed electronic structure at the crystal/crystal interface.

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