Upgrading Carbonate Electrolytes for Ultra-stable Practical Lithium Metal Batteries.
Qing ZhaoNyalaliska W UtomoAndrew L KocenShuo JinYue DengVivian Xiaojing ZhuSurya MogantyGeoffrey W CoatesLynden A ArcherPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
LiNO 3 is a widely used salt-additive that markedly improves the stability of ether-based electrolytes at a Li metal anode but is generally regarded as incompatible with alkyl carbonates. Here we find that contrary to common wisdom, cyclic carbonate solvents such as ethylene carbonate can dissolve up to 0.7 M LiNO 3 without any additives, largely improving the anode reversibility. We demonstrate the significance of our findings by upgrading various state-of-the-art carbonate electrolytes with LiNO 3 , which provides large improvements in batteries composed of thin lithium (50 μm) anode and high voltage cathodes. Capacity retentions of 90.5 % after 600 cycles and 92.5 % after 200 cycles are reported for LiNi 0.6 Mn 0.2 Co 0.2 O 2 (2 mAh cm -2 , 0.5 C) and LiNi 0.8 Mn 0.1 Co 0.1 O 2 cathode (4 mAh cm -2 , 0.2 C), respectively. 1 Ah pouch cells (≈300 Wh kg -1 ) retain more than 87.9 % after 100 cycles at 0.5 C. This work illustrates that reforming traditional carbonate electrolytes provides a scalable, cost-effective approach towards practical LMBs.