4.7 Article

Revisiting Solvent-Dependent Roles of the Electrolyte Counteranion in Li-O2 Batteries upon CO2 Incorporation

Journal

ACS APPLIED ENERGY MATERIALS
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages 2150-2160

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaem.1c03712

Keywords

lithium-oxygen battery; Li-air; CO2; energy storage; Li counteranion

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean Government [2020R 1A 2C 3003958]
  2. Korea Basic Science Institute (National Research Facilities and Equipment Center) - Ministry of Education [2020R 1A 6C 101B194]
  3. Creative Materials Discovery Program through the NRF - Ministry of Science and ICT [2018M 3D 1A 1058536]
  4. Brain Pool Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT [2017H1D3A1A02054206]
  5. National Research Foundation of Korea [2017H1D3A1A02054206] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Lithium-oxygen batteries have the potential to become the next-generation high-energy storage candidates. This study reveals the relationship between oxygen chelation effect and tetraglyme, as well as the influence of CO2 on the electrochemical reactions. The findings emphasize the need to reassess the relationship between solubility and reaction pathways in practical applications.
Lithium-oxygen batteries are promising next-generation high-energy storage candidates. Replacing pure O-2 with air and uncovering moisture and CO2-contamination effects on the O-2 electrochemistry, however, represent necessary steps toward commercialization. Representatively, a CO2-induced shift toward Li2CO3 formation has been systematically disclosed in a number of electrolyte solvents. Here, we show that in tetraglyme only Li2CO3 is formed without Li2O2. Using explicit theoretical calculations, we reveal that discharge is governed by the strong chelation effect induced by oxygen lone electron pairs of the glyme, which emphasizes the importance of assessing direct interatomic interactions between Li+ and solvent molecules when determining preferred reaction pathways in these O-2/CO2 systems. The choice of the electrolyte counteranion investigated here for the first time, however, has no apparent effect on the O-2/CO2 electrochemistry, leading to Li2CO3. Galvanostatic results and product analysisnonetheless reveal that highly dissociated Li+ counteranions in tetraglyme favorably stabilize soluble peroxocarbonate reaction intermediates during discharge, whereas highly associated salts accelerate Li2CO3 precipitation, dramatically narrowing the cell capacity. Importantly, these observations are also distinct from prior conclusions from rationally designed electrolytes under pure O-2 conditions and emphasize the need to revisit established correlations between uncovered counteranion...Li+...solvent interaction degrees and the balance between mechanistic pathways in practical Li-air devices.

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