Super‐concentrated “water‐in‐salt” electrolytes recently spurred resurgent interest for high energy density aqueous lithium‐ion batteries. Thermodynamic stabilization at high concentrations and kinetic barriers towards interfacial water electrolysis significantly expand the electrochemical stability window, facilitating high voltage aqueous cells. Herein we investigated LiTFSI/H2O electrolyte interfacial decomposition pathways in the “water‐in‐salt” and “salt‐in‐water” regimes using synchrotron X‐rays, which produce electrons at the solid/electrolyte interface to mimic reductive environments, and simultaneously probe the structure of surface films using X‐ray diffraction. We observed the surface‐reduction of TFSI−at super‐concentration, leading to lithium fluoride interphase formation, while precipitation of the lithium hydroxide was not observed. The mechanism behind this photoelectron‐induced reduction was revealed to be concentration‐dependent interfacial chemistry that only occurs among closely contact ion‐pairs, which constitutes the rationale behind the “water‐in‐salt” concept.
Fluoride ion batteries are potential “next-generation” electrochemical storage devices that offer high energy density. At present, such batteries are limited to operation at high temperatures because suitable fluoride ion–conducting electrolytes are known only in the solid state. We report a liquid fluoride ion–conducting electrolyte with high ionic conductivity, wide operating voltage, and robust chemical stability based on dry tetraalkylammonium fluoride salts in ether solvents. Pairing this liquid electrolyte with a copper–lanthanum trifluoride (Cu@LaF3) core-shell cathode, we demonstrate reversible fluorination and defluorination reactions in a fluoride ion electrochemical cell cycled at room temperature. Fluoride ion–mediated electrochemistry offers a pathway toward developing capacities beyond that of lithium ion technology.
more » « less- PAR ID:
- 10081030
- Author(s) / Creator(s):
- ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; more »
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Science
- Volume:
- 362
- Issue:
- 6419
- ISSN:
- 0036-8075
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- p. 1144-1148
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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Abstract -
Abstract Super‐concentrated “water‐in‐salt” electrolytes recently spurred resurgent interest for high energy density aqueous lithium‐ion batteries. Thermodynamic stabilization at high concentrations and kinetic barriers towards interfacial water electrolysis significantly expand the electrochemical stability window, facilitating high voltage aqueous cells. Herein we investigated LiTFSI/H2O electrolyte interfacial decomposition pathways in the “water‐in‐salt” and “salt‐in‐water” regimes using synchrotron X‐rays, which produce electrons at the solid/electrolyte interface to mimic reductive environments, and simultaneously probe the structure of surface films using X‐ray diffraction. We observed the surface‐reduction of TFSI−at super‐concentration, leading to lithium fluoride interphase formation, while precipitation of the lithium hydroxide was not observed. The mechanism behind this photoelectron‐induced reduction was revealed to be concentration‐dependent interfacial chemistry that only occurs among closely contact ion‐pairs, which constitutes the rationale behind the “water‐in‐salt” concept.
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