Abstract

Abstract Rechargeable lithium‐metal batteries (LMBs) are regarded as the “holy grail” of energy‐storage systems, but the electrolytes that are highly stable with both a lithium‐metal anode and high‐voltage cathodes still remain a great challenge. Here a novel “localized high‐concentration electrolyte” (HCE; 1.2 m lithium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide in a mixture of dimethyl carbonate/bis(2,2,2‐trifluoroethyl) ether (1:2 by mol)) is reported that enables dendrite‐free cycling of lithium‐metal anodes with high Coulombic efficiency (99.5%) and excellent capacity retention (>80% after 700 cycles) of Li||LiNi 1/3 Mn 1/3 Co 1/3 O 2 batteries. Unlike the HCEs reported before, the electrolyte reported in this work exhibits low concentration, low cost, low viscosity, improved conductivity, and good wettability that make LMBs closer to practical applications. The fundamental concept of “localized HCEs” developed in this work can also be applied to other battery systems, sensors, supercapacitors, and other electrochemical systems.

Keywords

ElectrolyteMaterials scienceAnodeFaraday efficiencyElectrochemistryLithium (medication)Lithium metalCathodeChemical engineeringSupercapacitorBattery (electricity)Energy storageConductivityMetalInorganic chemistryElectrodeChemistryMetallurgy

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
30
Issue
21
Pages
e1706102-e1706102
Citations
1233
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Shuru Chen, Jianming Zheng, Donghai Mei et al. (2018). High‐Voltage Lithium‐Metal Batteries Enabled by Localized High‐Concentration Electrolytes. Advanced Materials , 30 (21) , e1706102-e1706102. https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201706102

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DOI
10.1002/adma.201706102