1 research outputs found
Modeling Insight into Battery Electrolyte Electrochemical Stability and Interfacial Structure
ConspectusElectroactive interfaces distinguish electrochemistry
from chemistry and enable electrochemical energy devices like batteries,
fuel cells, and electric double layer capacitors. In batteries, electrolytes
should be either thermodynamically stable at the electrode interfaces
or kinetically stable by forming an electronically insulating but
ionically conducting interphase. In addition to a traditional optimization
of electrolytes by adding cosolvents and sacrificial additives to
preferentially reduce or oxidize at the electrode surfaces, knowledge
of the local electrolyte composition and structure within the double
layer as a function of voltage constitutes the basis of manipulating
an interphase and expanding the operating windows of electrochemical
devices. In this work, we focus on how the molecular-scale insight
into the solvent and ion partitioning in the electrolyte double layer
as a function of applied potential could predict changes in electrolyte
stability and its initial oxidation and reduction reactions. In molecular
dynamics (MD) simulations, highly concentrated lithium aqueous and
nonaqueous electrolytes were found to exclude the solvent molecules
from directly interacting with the positive electrode surface, which
provides an additional mechanism for extending the electrolyte oxidation
stability in addition to the well-established simple elimination of āfreeā
solvent at high salt concentrations. We demonstrate that depending
on their chemical structures, the anions could be designed to preferentially
adsorb or desorb from the positive electrode with increasing electrode
potential. This provides additional leverage to dictate the order
of anion oxidation and to effectively select a sacrificial anion for
decomposition. The opposite electrosorption behaviors of bisĀ(trifluoromethane)Āsulfonimide
(TFSI) and trifluoromethanesulfonate (OTF) as predicted by MD simulation
in highly concentrated aqueous electrolytes were confirmed by surface
enhanced infrared spectroscopy.The proton transfer (H-transfer)
reactions between solvent molecules on the cathode surface coupled
with solvent oxidation were found to be ubiquitous for common Li-ion
electrolyte components and dependent on the local molecular environment.
Quantum chemistry (QC) calculations on the representative clusters
showed that the majority of solvents such as carbonates, phosphates,
sulfones, and ethers have significantly lower oxidation potential
when oxidation is coupled with H-transfer, while without H-transfer
their oxidation potentials reside well beyond battery operating potentials.
Thus, screening of the solvent oxidation limits without considering
H-transfer reactions is unlikely to be relevant, except for solvents
containing unsaturated functionalities (such as Cī»C) that oxidize
without H-transfer. On the anode, the F-transfer reaction and LiF
formation during anion and fluorinated solvent reduction could be
enhanced or diminished depending on salt and solvent partitioning
in the double layer, again giving an additional tool to manipulate
the order of reductive decompositions and interphase chemistry. Combined
with experimental efforts, modeling results highlight the promise
of interphasial compositional control by either bringing the desired
components closer to the electrode surface to facilitate redox reaction
or expelling them so that they are kinetically shielded from the potential
of the electrode