Stable cycling via absolute intercalation in graphite-based lithium-ion battery incorporated by solidified ether-based polymer electrolyte

Current lithium-ion batteries are vulnerable to fire accidents and explosions because liquid electrolytes have a low flash point and poor thermal stability. This intrinsic problem has led to an ever-growing interest in solid-state polymer electrolytes with high thermal stability. In this study, a so...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inMaterials advances Vol. 2; no. 12; pp. 3898 - 3905
Main Authors Kim, Hyunjin, Kim, Do Youb, Suk, Jungdon, Kang, Yongku, Lee, Jin Bae, Kim, Hae Jin, Kim, Dong Wook
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 21.06.2021
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Current lithium-ion batteries are vulnerable to fire accidents and explosions because liquid electrolytes have a low flash point and poor thermal stability. This intrinsic problem has led to an ever-growing interest in solid-state polymer electrolytes with high thermal stability. In this study, a solidified polyether-based polymer electrolyte is incorporated into a graphite/LiFePO 4 full-cell battery. A liquid precursor, which is prepared by mixing the bisphenol A ethoxylate diacrylate (BisA) crosslinker and the poly(ethylene glycol) dimethyl ether (PEGDME) plasticizer, first wets the anode and cathode, and is then solidified by in situ thermal crosslinking to produce a solid polymer electrolyte. BisA forms a rigid crosslinked network and PEGDME conducts lithium ions within the network. Analysis results, including in situ X-ray diffraction, show that PEGDME in the polymer electrolyte is co-intercalated with lithium ions into the gallery of the graphite electrode, which causes electrode exfoliation and severe capacity fading. Fluoroethylene carbonate is highly effective to prevent the co-intercalation of lithium–PEGDME complex ions into the graphite, via the formation of a solid electrolyte interphase layer, which leads to the ‘absolute intercalation’ of lithium ions. Consequently, the graphite/LiFePO 4 full-cell battery based on the solid polymer electrolyte runs stably at a coulombic efficiency higher than 99% for most cycles and the residual capacity of the cell reaches 80% after 100 cycles.
ISSN:2633-5409
2633-5409
DOI:10.1039/D0MA00946F