Current-driven solvent segregation in lithium-ion electrolytes
Andrew A. Wang, Samuel Greenbank, Guanchen Li, David A. Howey, Charles W. Monroe
Abstract
Liquid lithium-battery electrolytes universally incorporate at least two solvents to balance conductivity and viscosity. Almost all continuum models treat cosolvent systems such as ethylene carbonate:ethyl-methyl carbonate (EC:EMC) as single entities whose constituents travel with identical velocities. We test this “single-solvent approximation” by subjecting LiPF6:EC:EMC blends to constant-current polarization in Hittorf experiments. A Gaussian process regression model trained on physicochemical properties quantifies changes in composition across the Hittorf cell. EC and EMC are found to migrate at noticeably different rates under applied current, demonstrating conclusively that the single-solvent approximation is violated and that polarization of salt concentration is anticorrelated with that of EC. Simulations show extreme solvent segregation near electrode/liquid interfaces: a 5% change in EC:EMC ratio, post-Hittorf polarization, implies more than a 50% change adjacent to the interface during the current pulse. Understanding how lithium-ion flux induces local cosolvent or additive imbalances suggests new approaches to electrolyte design.