4.8 Article

Fluoride in the SEI Stabilizes the Li Metal Interface in Li-S Batteries with Solvate Electrolytes

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 16, Pages 18865-18875

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c02629

Keywords

Li-S battery; solvate electrolyte; Li metal SEI; fluoroether cosolvent; AlF3; protective coating; acetonitrile-LiTFSI electrolyte

Funding

  1. President's and Director's Fund Program

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Research shows that high concentration solvate electrolytes can improve capacity retention and cyclability in Li-S cells, while the addition of a fluoroether cosolvent to the electrolyte helps reduce electrolyte decomposition. Additionally, coating the Li anode with AlF3 can further enhance interfacial stability at elevated temperatures.
Lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries offer high theoretical gravimetric capacities at low cost relative to commercial lithium-ion batteries. However, the solubility of intermediate polysulfides in conventional electrolytes leads to irreversible capacity fade via the polysulfide shuttle effect. Highly concentrated solvate electrolytes reduce polysulfide solubility and improve the reductive stability of the electrolyte against Li metal anodes, but reactivity at the Li/solvate electrolyte interface has not been studied in detail. Here, reactivity between the Li metal anode and a solvate electrolyte (4.2 M LiTFSI in acetonitrile) is investigated as a function of temperature. Though reactivity at the Li/electrolyte interface is minimal at room temperature, we show that reactions between Li and the solvate electrolyte significantly impact the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) impedance, cyclability, and capacity retention in Li-S cells at elevated temperatures. Addition of a fluoroether cosolvent to the solvate electrolyte results in more fluoride in the SEI which minimizes electrolyte decomposition, reduces SEI impedance, and improves cyclability. A 6 nm AlF3 surface coating is employed at the Li anode to further improve interfacial stability at elevated temperatures. The coating enables moderate cyclability in Li-S cells at elevated temperatures but does not protect against capacity fade over time.

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