Login / Signup

Competitive Salt Precipitation/Dissolution During Free-Water Reduction in Water-in-Salt Electrolyte.

Roza BouchalZhujie LiChandra BonguSteven Le VotRomain BerthelotBenjamin RotenbergFrederic FavierStefan A FreunbergerMathieu SalanneOlivier Fontaine
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Water-in-salt electrolytes based on highly concentrated bis(trifluoromethyl)sulfonimide (TFSI) promise aqueous electrolytes with stabilities nearing 3 V. However, especially with an electrode approaching the cathodic (reductive) stability, cycling stability is insufficient. While stability critically relies on a solid electrolyte interphase (SEI), the mechanism behind the cathodic stability limit remains unclear. Now, two distinct reduction potentials are revealed for the chemical environments of free and bound water and that both contribute to SEI formation. Free water is reduced about 1 V above bound water in a hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and is responsible for SEI formation via reactive intermediates of the HER; concurrent LiTFSI precipitation/dissolution establishes a dynamic interface. The free-water population emerges, therefore, as the handle to extend the cathodic limit of aqueous electrolytes and the battery cycling stability.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • solid state
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • ion batteries
  • machine learning
  • high intensity
  • single cell
  • big data