Predicting Degradation Mechanisms in Lithium Bistriflimide “Water‐In‐Salt” Electrolytes For Aqueous Batteries

Author:

Paillot Malaurie1,Wong Alan1,Denisov Sergey A.2,Soudan Patrick3,Poizot Philippe3,Montigny Benedicte4,Mostafavi Mehran2,Gauthier Magali1,Le Caër Sophie1

Affiliation:

1. Université Paris-Saclay CEA, CNRS, NIMBE CEA Saclay 91191 Gif sur Yvette Cedex France

2. Institut de Chimie Physique UMR8000 CNRS, Université Paris Saclay Bâtiment 349 91405 Orsay France

3. Nantes Université CNRS, Institut des Matériaux de Nantes Jean Rouxel, IMN Nantes F-44000 France

4. Laboratoire de Physico-Chimie des Matériaux et des Electrolytes pour l'Energie (EA 6299) Université de Tours Parc de Grandmont 37200 France

Abstract

AbstractAqueous solutions are crucial to most domains in biology and chemistry, including in energy fields such as catalysis and batteries. Water‐in‐salt electrolytes (WISEs), which extend the stability of aqueous electrolytes in rechargeable batteries, are one example. While the hype for WISEs is huge, commercial WISE‐based rechargeable batteries are still far from reality, and there remain several fundamental knowledge gaps such as those related to their long‐term reactivity and stability. Here, we propose a comprehensive approach to accelerating the study of WISE reactivity by using radiolysis to exacerbate the degradation mechanisms of concentrated LiTFSI‐based aqueous solutions. We find that the nature of the degradation species depends strongly on the molality of the electrolye, with degradation routes driven by the water or the anion at low or high molalities, respectively. The main aging products are consistent with those observed by electrochemical cycling, yet radiolysis also reveals minor degradation species, providing a unique glimpse of the long‐term (un)stability of these electrolytes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Energy,General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Environmental Chemistry

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