4.8 Article

Water-in-salt polymer electrolyte for Li-ion batteries

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 2878-2887

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0ee01510e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy (DOE) through ARPA-E grant [DEAR0000389]
  2. U.S. Army Research Laboratory [W911NF1920341]
  3. Center of Research on Extreme Batteries
  4. Maryland Nano Center and its NispLab
  5. NSF as a MRSEC Shared Experimental Facility

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Recent success in extending the electrochemical stability window of aqueous electrolytes to 3.0 V by using 21 mol kg(-1)water-in-salt (WiS) has raised a high expectation for developing safe aqueous Li-ion batteries. However, the most compatible Li(4)Ti(5)O(12)anodes still cannot use WiS electrolyte due to the cathodic limit (1.9 Vvs.Li/Li+). Herein, a UV-curable hydrophilic polymer is introduced to further extend the cathodic limit of WiS electrolytes and replace the separator. In addition, a localized strongly basic solid polymer electrolyte (SPE) layer is coated on the anode to promote the formation of an LiF-rich SEI. The synthetic impacts of UV-crosslinking and local alkaline SPE on the anodes extend the electrochemical stability window of the solid-state aqueous polymer electrolyte to similar to 3.86 V even at a reduced salt concentration of 12 mol kg(-1). It enables a separator-free LiMn2O4//Li(4)Ti(5)O(12)aqueous full cell with a practical capacity ratio (P/N = 1.14) of the cathode and anode to deliver a steady energy density of 151 W h kg(-1)at 0.5C with an initial Coulombic efficiency of 90.50% and cycled for over 600 cycles with an average Coulombic efficiency of 99.97%, which has never been reported before for an aqueous LiMn2O4//Li(4)Ti(5)O(12)full cell. This flexible and long-duration aqueous Li-ion battery with hydrogel WiSE can be widely used as a power source in wearable devices and electrical transportations where both energy density and battery safety are of high priority. An ultra-thick LTO electrode with UV-curable polymer electrolyte as the binder is demonstrated as a solid state battery electrode. And a high-voltage (7.4 V) solid-state bipolar cell is assembled with a solid-state UV-curable polymer as the electrolyte.

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