Junjie Bai,
Huimin Lu*,
Yuan Cao,
Xudong Li and
Junren Wang
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Beihang University, Beijing 100191, PR China. E-mail: lhm0862002@aliyun.com; Tel: +86 13331151800
First published on 14th June 2017
Novel ionic liquid polymer electrolytes based on polymer poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene) (PVdF-HFP), lithium bis(tri-fluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI) with different 1-ethyl-3-methyl-imidazolium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (EMITFSI) weight ratios have been synthesized and applied to quasi-solid state Li–air batteries. The morphology, electrochemical properties of prepared electrolytes, the discharge–charge capacity and cycling performance of the quasi-solid state Li–air batteries have been characterized and are discussed. Electrochemical properties of polymer electrolyte with incorporation of EMITFSI improved the electrochemical stability window (4.9 V) with higher ionic conductivity (∼4.30 × 10−3 S cm−1), but decreased the cationic transference number. The improvements are attributed to the reducing crystallinity of polymer matrix and formation of many homogeneous, large-size across-linked pores (60% EMITFSI), which could facilitate the transmission of Li ions. While for the quasi-solid state Li–air batteries, the ionic liquid polymer electrolyte shows good compatibility and safety with an Li anode and an air breathing cathode, significantly improved galvanostatic discharge–charge capacity and cyclic stability (without capacity fading until 20 cycles) in the capacity-controlled mode, which demonstrates that the novel ionic liquid polymer electrolyte is a potential choice for the quasi-solid state Li–air batteries for future practical applications.
Electrolyte selection plays a very important role in the LABs system. At the initial stage of the studying of LABs, there has been some experimental and theoretical evidence that traditional liquid electrolytes (like the organic carbonates electrolyte) commonly used in lithium-ion batteries are not suitable for LABs due to shortcomings such as easy leakage, flammability and the corrosion of lithium metal.8–11 To solve the problems of liquid electrolytes, the researchers found gel polymer electrolyte, which consist of polymers (like poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), PVdF-HFP etc.) and ionic salts (like LiTFSI, lithium tetrafluoroborate (LiBF4), lithium hexafluorophosphate (LiPF6) etc.), combine outstanding electrochemical properties of liquid electrolytes with high safety of polymer materials. PVdF-HFP is an ideal matrix to polymer electrolyte (the polymer choice for Bellcore's plastic Li-ion batteries) because of the presence of strong electron attracting functional group (–C–F), high dielectric constant (ε = 8.4) and good mechanical properties, the functional group (–HFP) reduced crystallinity, improved the ionic conductivity. Although some PVdF-HFP-based products have been industrialized in the USA, China and Japan, electrochemical properties such as ionic conductivity still are much smaller than the traditional liquid electrolyte.11–14
It had been reported that PVdF-HFP-based polymer electrolyte containing different ionic liquids possessed excellent physical and electrochemical properties in the battery applications due to some outstanding properties of ionic liquid such as non-volatile, non-flammable, high thermal stability, wide electrochemical window and high ionic conductivity (ionic liquid increases the number of ionic transport carriers).13,15–23 Kuboki et al. studied some hydrophobic ionic liquids and suggested EMITFSI as a promising candidate of electrolyte component, besides low viscosity (only 30 cP), high ionic conductivity, it is hydrophobic, chemically stable in moist atmosphere so it can prevent the vaporization of electrolyte and the corrosion of anode (even provide stable lithium deposition/dissolution).24–26
On the basis of the above background, in this study, we synthesized the ionic liquid polymer electrolyte (the ILP-based electrolyte) by adding EMITFSI (specific volume ratio) to PVdF-HFP/LiTFSI and assembled the quasi-solid state LABs. The influence of adding different EMITFSI weight ratios to polymer electrolyte on microstructure, electrochemical properties were studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), linear sweep voltammetry (LSV), cationic transference number, interfacial resistance of electrolyte with anode and cathode. The discharge–charge behaviours and cycling performance of the quasi-solid state LABs are aimed to investigate under a defined current density. Furthermore, polymer electrolyte without EMITFSI was used as a comparison.
Sample | Weight composition (wt%) | ||
---|---|---|---|
PVdF-HFP (polymer) | EMITFSI (ionic liquid) | LiTFSI (Li salt) | |
ILP0 | 80 | 0 | 20 |
ILP1 | 60 | 20 | 20 |
ILP2 | 40 | 40 | 20 |
ILP3 | 20 | 60 | 20 |
Electrochemical stability window was investigated by LSV at a scanning rate of 1.0 mV s−1, where SS (stainless steel) was used as working electrode and lithium was used as both counter and reference electrodes.
Ionic conductivity was measured by potentiostatic EIS with blocking cell (SS/ILP/SS) within frequency range from 0.01 Hz to 100 kHz at room temperature (298 K). The ionic conductivity (σ) was determined from the eqn (1):
(1) |
Cationic transference number (tLi+) of the ILP-based electrolyte was determined with symmetric cell (Li/ILP/Li) by using the combined a.c./d.c. technique.15 In this technique, the initial current (I0) and final current (ISS) can be measured, at a constant polarization voltage of 10 mV in 5000 s. The resistances of cell (before (R0) and after (RSS) polarization) were also measured by a.c. impedance spectroscopy within a frequency range from 0.01 Hz to 100 kHz at room temperature. The following eqn (2) was used for the estimation of the value of tLi+.
tLi+ = ISS(ΔV − I0R0)/(I0(ΔV − ISSRSS)) | (2) |
Interface resistance at the lithium metal/electrode interface was measured by potentiostatic EIS with symmetric cell (Li/ILP/Li) within frequency range from 0.01 Hz to 100 kHz at the amplitude of 10 mV for a period up to 25 days (at room temperature).
Fig. 1 SEM images for (a) ILP0. (b) ILP1. (c) ILP2. (d) ILP3 based polymer electrolytes. Original images are shown in insets. |
Fig. 2 LSV of PVdF-HFP/LiTFSI/EMITFSI based polymer electrolytes: (a) ILP0. (b) ILP1. (c) ILP2. (d) ILP3. |
Sufficient ionic conductivity (σ) is one of the key factors for maintaining transport of lithium ions in the ILP-based electrolyte for the quasi-solid state LABs. The values of σ are presented in Table 2. The σ of pure ionic liquid EMITFSI at 298 K was ∼7.94 × 10−3 S cm−1 (tested by conductivity meter DDSJ-318), the σ of the ILP1-based electrolyte at 298 K is found to be ∼1.15 × 10−5 S cm−1, which is not enough for LABs applications. With the increasing concentration of EMITFSI, the σ of the ILP-based electrolyte had a drastic increment and reached a maximum value of ∼4.30 × 10−3 S cm−1 (the highest amount of EMITFSI) at 298 K, which is much higher than that of previous reports. The high ionic conductivity value above are ascribed to the combined effect of polymer, lithium salt, ionic liquid through the decreasing in crystallinity and the formation of more ion channels (can be seen in Fig. 1(d)), PVdF-HFP provides mechanical support and dimensional stabilization through chain entanglements and chemical cross-linking, Li salt LiTFSI has excellent properties like high salt dissociation, low lattice energy, uneasy to form ion-pairs and act as a plasticizer for polymer electrolyte (by creating free-volume) to enhance ionic mobility, ionic liquid EMITFSI functions as a plasticizer and a solvation medium for Li salt. Besides, there are literature references which document that the mixed-anion systems (i.e. Li salt and ionic liquid have different anion) possibly form contact/cross-contact ion pairs (which don't take part in the ion conduction mechanism) and decrease the ionic conductivity obviously in the system. EMITFSI and LiTFSI contain same anion TFSI−, the kind of ion and cross-contact ion pairs are less, therefore enhance the value of ionic conductivity.28
Sample | Thickness (L)/mm | Bulk resistance (Rb)/Ω | Ionic conductivity values (σ)/S cm−1 | tLi+ |
---|---|---|---|---|
EMITFSI | — | — | 7.94 × 10−3 | — |
ILP0 | 0.110 | 478.9 | 1.15 × 10−5 | 0.67 |
ILP1 | 0.235 | 22.68 | 5.18 × 10−4 | 0.58 |
ILP2 | 0.281 | 10.25 | 1.37 × 10−3 | 0.33 |
ILP3 | 0.312 | 3.63 | 4.30 × 10−3 | 0.27 |
Ionic conductivity corresponds to the flow of three different ions (i.e. EMI+, Li+ and TFSI−) in the system, so it's important to calculate the transport number of Li+ (tLi+), which directly affect the power density of LABs by reducing the concentration of polarization. The results of chronoamperometry (CA) and EIS are shown in Fig. 3(a–d). The values of tLi+ were calculated through eqn (2) and are presented in Table 2. It can be seen that, the value of tLi+ in the system decreases with the increasing amount of EMITFSI from 0.67 (without EMITFSI) to 0.27 (with 60% EMITFSI) at room temperature. This result represents that the ionic conductivity of the system is dependent more on other ions present in the system such as the anions TFSI− ions and imidazolium cations EMI+. The decline of tLi+ in the system is inevitable because of the incursion of irrelevant ions with incorporation of EMITFSI, Li et al. also reported that the tLi+ decreases with increasing concentration of ionic liquid PYR14TFSI in the PVdF-HFP/LiTFSI/PYR14TFSI system and the value of tLi+ is 0.3 when contains 50% PYR14TFSI.29
Fig. 3 CA polarization curves and EIS plot before and after polarization (inset) of PVdF-HFP/LiTFSI/EMITFSI based polymer electrolytes: (a) ILP0. (b) ILP1. (c) ILP2. (d) ILP3. |
Electrochemical stability of interface between Li anode with the ILP-based electrolyte is important to cyclic stability of the quasi-solid state LABs. Electrochemical impedance evolution of Li/electrolyte (ILP-based)/Li cell at open circuit potential as a function of storage time as shown in Fig. 4, which shows typical impedance resistance patterns consisting of a semicircle at high-frequency and a short line at low-frequency. It can be seen that, the total impedance of polymer electrolyte without EMITFSI is about 60 kΩ after cell is assembled and almost unchanged within storage time of 10 d, but it increases after the 10 d to 73 kΩ after 25 d, which represent the formation of passive film on Li anode surface due to anode corrosion. While for the ILP2-based electrolyte, the initial impedance is only 550 Ω but it increases rapidly with the continuous formation of the passive film within 25 days and up to about 22 kΩ after 25 d. By comparison, the initial impedance of the ILP3-based electrolyte measured immediately after assembled is about 400 Ω and the impedance remains almost constant even after 25 days, means that there is almost no protective passive film form on Li anode, which demonstrate that electrolyte with 60% EMITFSI additions can protect Li anode well during electrochemical cycling.
Fig. 4 Impedance evolution of Li/electrolyte (ILP-based)/Li cell at open circuit potential as a function of storage time at room temperature: (a) ILP0. (b) ILP2. (c) ILP3. |
For the reason above, capacity-limited tests have been proposed by different researchers and considered to be an acceptable method in line with the reaction mechanism and the configuration of LABs.11 Fig. 6 shows voltage-capacity characteristics of the ILP2 and ILP3-based electrolyte at the state of 10 h charge–10 h discharge. As can be concluded, the stability of LABs is significantly enhanced and the cycle ability improved especially for the ILP3-based electrolyte. These discharge plateau characteristics are exhibited at around 2.5 V to 2.7 V, but the ILP2-based electrolyte's discharge plateau drop obviously during cycling, causing the overpotential of oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) and oxygen evolution reaction (OER) rise, which indicate that battery's polarization (for charge and discharge) become serious especially after 5th cycle. By comparison, the ILP3-based electrolyte with 60% EMITFSI addition has lower and more stable overpotential even after 20th cycle, its polarization gap is steady (around 1.2 V) between charge of 3.8 V and discharge of 2.6 V during 10 cycles, and show almost all of its capacity fading at the 25th cycle (can hardly be avoided in prolonged cycling). These can be ascribed to the formation of more ionic channels and Li anode protection (can be seen from Fig. 4) of electrolyte with 60% EMITFST, which provide more reaction sites and weaken the polarization of the battery. So as we can conclude from the present results, the safety quasi-solid state LABs performance can be improved greatly by incorporating 60% EMITFSI in polymer electrolyte. Compared with the relevant liquid electrolyte (LiTFSI + EMITFSI), Li–air battery with the ILP3-based electrolyte has better cycling performance and is safer with the same discharge capacity (about 6 mA h), which are presented in Table 3.30
Fig. 6 The discharge–charge curves of LABs with (a) ILP2. (b) ILP3 electrolytes (10 h charge–10 h discharge), cycled at 0.05 mA cm−2 between 2 V and 4.5 V. |
Electrolyte | Discharge capacity (mA h) | Cycling number (capacity-limited) |
---|---|---|
EMITFSI + LiTFSI | 6.4 | 1 |
EMITFSI + LiTFSI + 0.1% PEO | 6.1 | 2 |
EMITFSI + LiTFSI + 0.1% PVDF | 6.5 | 10 |
The ILP3-based | 6.1 | 20 |
In order to evaluate the chemical and discharge products variations, SEM micrographs of the air breathing cathode pristine and after full discharge are shown in Fig. 7. As we can see, pristine cathode electroactive material have a morphology of flat flakes (Fig. 7(a)), compared with it, the air breathing cathode surfaces after full discharge are covered by a layer of reaction product, which are believed to be mainly Li2O2 phase and some Li2O, Li2CO3 phases, it is similar to the morphology of Li2O2 reported by Marinaro et al.31: hollow structure with a smooth surface and nodular morphology, a range of 200–350 nm of dimension. For the ILP1-based electrolyte, the discharge product after full discharge are very few and don't clog the air breathing cathode, so we speculate that the blocking of ion channels in the electrolyte by nonconductive Li2O2 lead to the failure of further discharge processes. While for the ILP2-based electrolyte and especially the ILP3-based electrolyte, there are more discharge product accumulate on the cathode, which even block the pores of cathode, result in the rapid capacity decrease in the further discharge step, on the other hand, it means that the ILP3-based electrolyte shows good compatibility with air breathing cathode and allows more solid Li2O2 exist and accumulate.
Fig. 7 SEM morphologies of cathode of LABs with different ILP-based electrolyte after full discharge: (a) pristine. (b) ILP1. (c) ILP2. (d) ILP3. |
So as it can be concluded that the novel polymer electrolyte with incorporation of EMITFSI ionic liquid (especially for 60% addition) has excellent electrochemical performance, greatly improves the charge and discharge capacity and cycling performance of the quasi-solid state LABs, suggests realistic strategies of the quasi-solid state LABs for future practical applications. However, the ILP-based electrolyte is still in its preliminary stage, the Li+ transport number and cyclic stability need to be enhanced in subsequent work (such as the incorporation of alternative electrocatalysts).
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