4.6 Article

Enhanced electrochemical properties of lithium-tin liquid metal battery via the introduction of bismuth cathode material

Journal

ELECTROCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 389, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.electacta.2021.138697

Keywords

Liquid metal battery; Tin-bismuth cathode; Lithium anode; Molten salt electrolyte

Funding

  1. Agency for Defense Develop-ment of the Republic of Korea

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The performance of liquid metal batteries can be significantly improved by alloying the cell components, resulting in higher charging and discharging voltages, improved rate capability, and reduced capacity losses. The Sn-Bi cell, with alloying of tin and bismuth, demonstrates excellent cycle performance and shows promising potential for industrial applications in stationary storage.
The performance of a liquid metal battery can be significantly enhanced by lowering the cell operating temperature through alloying of the cell components. The effect of alloying pure tin metal, a cathode material for liquid metal batteries, on electrochemical properties is investigated by preparing a Li vertical bar Sn-Bi (Sn:Bi = 56:44 at%) battery cell. The Li vertical bar Sn-Bi cell achieves mean voltages of 0.856 and 0.683 V during charging and discharging, respectively, at 100 mA cm(-2), which are 0.039 and 0.067 V higher than those of the Li vertical bar Sn cell. The Li vertical bar Sn-Bi cell exhibits a high rate capability owing to the low charge-transfer resistance between the liquid electrodes and liquid electrolytes. The charge and discharge capacity losses are 6.5% and 18.6%, respectively, at 1000 mA cm(-2) compared with those at 100 mA cm(-2). The Li vertical bar Sn-Bi cell can be discharged even at 1000 mA cm(-2 )owing to an increase in the mean discharge voltage by the alloying of tin with bismuth. The Li vertical bar Sn-Bi cell also exhibits improved cycle performance, with a capacity retention of 94.2% after 1000 cycles and a capacity decay of 0.0065% per cycle. This is attributed to the lack of formation of intermetallic byproducts between Bi and the stainless steel case and suppression of the side reaction between Sn and stainless steel by bismuth in the Sn-Bi lamellar microstructure. Thus, using a Sn-Bi alloy as the positive material significantly improves battery performance, making the Li vertical bar Sn-Bi cell a good candidate for stationary storage applications. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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