Polymers have been used as additives in the liquid electrolytes typically used for secondary batteries that utilize metals as anode. Such additives are conventionally argued to improve long-term anode performance by suppressing morphological and hydrodynamic instabilities thought to be responsible for out-of-plane and dendritic metal deposition during battery charging. More recent studies have reported that the polymer additives provide even more fundamental mechanisms for stabilizing metal electrodeposition through their ability to regulate metal electrodeposit crystallography and, thereby, morphology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSolid-state electrolytes (SSEs) are challenged by complex interfacial chemistry and poor ion transport through the interfaces they form with battery electrodes. Here, we investigate a class of SSE composed of micrometer-sized lithium oxide (LiO) particles dispersed in a polymerizable 1,3-dioxolane (DOL) liquid. Ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of the DOL by Lewis acid salts inside a battery cell produces polymer-inorganic hybrid electrolytes with gradient properties on both the particle and battery cell length scales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers are known to adsorb spontaneously from liquid solutions in contact with high-energy substrates to form configurationally complex, but robust phases that often exhibit higher durability than might be expected from the individual physical bonds formed with the substrate. Rational control of the physical, chemical, and transport properties of such interphases has emerged as a fundamental opportunity for scientific and technological advances in energy storage technology but requires in-depth understanding of the conformation states and electrochemical effect of the adsorbed polymers. Here, we analyze the interfacial adsorption of oligomeric polyethylene glycol (PEG) chains of moderate sizes dissolved in protic and aprotic liquid electrolytes and find that there is an optimum polymer molecular weight of approximately 400 Da at which the highest columbic efficiency is achieved for both Zn and Li deposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHow surface chemistry influences reactions occurring thereupon has been a long-standing question of broad scientific and technological interest. Here, we consider the relation between the surface chemistry at interfaces and the reversibility of electrochemical transformations at rechargeable battery electrodes. Using Zn as a model system, we report that a moderate strength of chemical interaction between the deposit and the substrate-neither too weak nor too strong-enables highest reversibility and stability of the plating/stripping redox processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCoupled electron/ion transport is a defining characteristic of electrochemical processes, for example, battery charge/discharge. Analytical models that represent the complex transport and electrochemical processes in an electrode in terms of equivalent electrical circuits provide a simple, but successful framework for understanding the kinetics of these coupled transport phenomena. The premise of this review is that the nature of the time-dependent phase transitions in dynamic electrochemical environments serves as an important design parameter, orthogonal to the intrinsic mixed conducting properties of the active materials in battery electrodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControl of crystallography of metal electrodeposit films has recently emerged as a key to achieving long operating lifetimes in next-generation batteries. It is reported that the large crystallographic heterogeneity, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSolid electrolytes hold great promise for enabling the use of Li metal anodes. The main problem is that during cycling, Li can infiltrate along grain boundaries and cause short circuits, resulting in potentially catastrophic battery failure. At present, this phenomenon is not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF