Litcius/Paper detail

Lithium Solvation and Mobility in Ionic Liquid Electrolytes with Asymmetric Sulfonyl-Cyano Anion

Drace Penley, Xiaoyu Wang, Yun‐Yang Lee, Mounesha N. Garaga, Raziyeh Ghahremani, Steve Greenbaum, Edward J. Maginn, Burcu Gurkan

2022Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The solvation structure and transport properties of Li+ in ionic liquid (IL) electrolytes based on n-methyl-n-butylpyrrolidinium cyano(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide [PYR14][CTFSI] and [Li][CTFSI] (0 ≤ xLi ≤ 0.7) were studied by Raman and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) diffusometry, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. At xLi < 0.3, Li+ coordination is dominated by the cyano group. As xLi is increased, free cyano-sites become limited, resulting in increased coordination via the sulfonyl group. The 1:1 mixture of the symmetric anions bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide ([TFSI]) and dicyanamide ([DCA]) results in similar physical properties as the IL with [CTFSI]. However, anion asymmetry is shown to increase Li-salt solubility and promote Li+ transference. The lifetimes of Li+-cyano coordination for [CTFSI] are calculated to be shorter than those for [DCA], indicating that the competition from the sulfonyl group weakens its solvation with Li+. This resulted in higher Li+ transference for the electrolyte with [CTFSI]. In relation to the utility of these electrolytes in energy storage, the Li–LiFePO4 half cells assembled with IL electrolyte (xLi = 0.3, 0.5, and 0.7) demonstrated a nominal capacity of 140 mAh/g at 0.1C rate and 90 °C where the cell with xLi = 0.7 IL electrolyte demonstrated 61% capacity retention after 100 cycles and superior rate capability owing to increased electrochemical stability.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistrySolvationIonic liquidSulfonylElectrolyteDicyanamideImideElectrochemistryLithium (medication)Inorganic chemistryIonPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryAlkylCatalysisEndocrinologyMedicineElectrodeAdvanced Battery Materials and TechnologiesIonic liquids properties and applicationsAdvancements in Battery Materials