Comment on “Alternative strategy for a safe rechargeable battery” by M. H. Braga, N. S. Grundish, A. J. Murchison and J. B. Goodenough, Energy Environ. Sci., 2017, 10, 331–336

Daniel A. Steingart *a and Venkatasubramanian Viswanathan b
aDepartment of MAE/ACEE, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA. E-mail: steingart@princeton.edu
bDepartment of ME, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA

Received 15th May 2017 , Accepted 20th November 2017

First published on 5th December 2017

Braga et al.1 demonstrated a series of electrochemical cells consisting of: (a) alkali metal anodes; (b) a barium anti-perovskite separator; and (c) a variety of cathodes. The work shows that certain cells produce far more energy than standard faradaic analysis of the mass of the active oxidizing agent would allow, for e.g. the lithium anode/sulfur cathode combination, shown in Fig. 1 of the paper. Our comment is focused on the cells which exhibit this “overcapacity.”
image file: c7ee01318c-f1.tif
Fig. 1 Schematic representation of the discharged state of a standard Li–S battery (left) and of the metal plating scheme (right) proposed by Braga et al.

The overcapacity of the cell is not attributed to an unintended oxidizing agent, and the proposed mechanism involves neither the anode nor cathode undergoing any net redox in the overall reaction. Thus, the effective state of the positive electrode after “discharge” is that of unreduced cathode material and effectively unoxidized electrodeposited alkali metal.

In this comment we show that no mechanistic description is sufficient to connect the beginning and ending states while energy is released. The mechanistic process as described in the paper constitutes a first-law violation.

According to the mechanism proposed by Braga et al., schematically shown in Fig. 4, for the Li–S cell, lithium metal plates during discharge at the cathode:

 
Li → Li+ + e at negative electrode(1)
 
Li+ + e → Li at positive; ΔGnet = 0(2)
Taken together, the net free energy change for the two processes must be zero. There will be a free energy difference between the alkali metal and the electrolyte/positive copper current collector interface that can lead to underpotential deposition,2 but indeed such deposition occurs because of the driving force to equalize the potential between electrodes, not sustain a potential between the electrodes.

Following the mechanism proposed by Braga et al., the sulfur does not change its chemical state

 
S → S; ΔGnet = 0(3)
Finally, while Braga et al. establish that the potential between lithium and the copper positive current collector must be non-zero, there is no discussion of copper undergoing redox, and since it is held that (1) and (2) must simultaneously occur, the copper current collector undergoes no reaction,
 
Cu → Cu, which has ΔGnet = 0(4)
Therefore, based on statewise analysis, it is not possible for the cell to release energy as described. Similar arguments hold for cells made of Na–ferrocene and Li–MnO2 and those cells also cannot produce any energy without accounting for a proper reduction of the cathode and corresponding storing of alkali species in an oxidized state.

Braga et al. argue that there is a difference in the Fermi levels of the current collectors determined by the difference in work functions of the two current collectors, EF,A = 3.05 VSHE and EF,A = 0.40 VSHE. Once the cell begins discharging, the Fermi level at both ends of the current collector is pinned by the redox processes occurring at the anode and cathode, respectively.

It is worth highlighting that even if the sulfur “redox center” acts a redox mediator for the same eventual states, for example through an intermediate state, Li2S, according to the reactions,

2Li → 2Li+ + 2e at anode

2Li+ + 2e + S → Li2S.
In order to form the eventual state proposed by Braga et al., Li2S would have to spontaneously decompose to Li and S, requiring no less than the energy released during the discharge reaction. Thus, any redox-mediator activated pathway will also lead to net zero energy delivered.

For each cell in the work of Braga et al. an open circuit potential of that between the anode and the cathode is initially established. However, taken as a state machine, the cell cannot produce energy by simply moving the chemical species across the separator without a net reaction.

Thus, while the experimental result of Braga et al. is compelling as a solid state electrolyte with a lithium and sodium electrolyte capable of surviving many cycles, the metal redeposition mechanism described by Braga et al., cannot result in an electrochemical cell which produces energy.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare.

References

  1. M. H. Braga, N. S. Grundish, A. J. Murchison and J. B. Goodenough, Energy Environ. Sci., 2017, 10, 331–336 CAS.
  2. D. M. Kolb, M. Przasnyski and H. Gerischer, J. Electroanal. Chem. Interfacial Electrochem., 1974, 54, 25–38 CrossRef CAS.

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