4.6 Article

On the concentration polarisation in molten Li salts and borate-based Li ionic liquids

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages 6970-6978

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cp05710g

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Electrolytes that transport only Li ions are important in improving charge and discharge properties in Li secondary batteries. However, borate-based Li ionic liquids induce concentration polarisation, resulting in low transference numbers under anion-blocking conditions. This study confirms that the presence of dynamic exchangeable bonds causes electrochemical polarisation and provides a reference for the design of Li ionic liquids with single-ion conducting properties.
Electrolytes that transport only Li ions play a crucial role in improving rapid charge and discharge properties in Li secondary batteries. Single Li-ion conduction can be achieved via liquid materials such as Li ionic liquids containing Li+ as the only cations because solvent-free fused Li salts do not polarise in electrochemical cells, owing to the absence of neutral solvents that allow polarisation in the salt concentration and the inevitably homogeneous density in the cells under anion-blocking conditions. However, we found that borate-based Li ionic liquids induce concentration polarisation in a Li/Li symmetric cell, which results in their transference (transport) numbers under anion-blocking conditions (tabc Li) being well below unity. The electrochemical polarisation of the borate-based Li ionic liquids was attributed to an equilibrium shift caused by exchangeable B-O coordination bonds in the anions to generate Li salts and borate-ester solvents at the electrode/electrolyte interface. By comparing borate-based Li ionic liquids containing different ligands, the B-O bond strength and extent of ligand exchange were found to be directly linked to the tabc Li values. This study confirms that the presence of dynamic exchangeable bonds causes electrochemical polarisation and provides a reference for the rational molecular design of Li ionic liquids aimed at achieving single-ion conducting liquid electrolytes.

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