Nitrate Additives Coordinated with Crown Ether Stabilize Lithium Metal Anodes in Carbonate Electrolyte

  • Sichen Gu
  • , Si Wei Zhang
  • , Junwei Han
  • , Yaqian Deng
  • , Chong Luo
  • , Guangmin Zhou
  • , Yanbing He
  • , Guodan Wei
  • , Feiyu Kang
  • , Wei Lv*
  • , Quan Hong Yang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

93 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Lithium metal anodes (LMAs) are promising for next-generation batteries but have poor compatibility with the widely used carbonate-based electrolytes, which is a major reason for their severe dendrite growth and low Coulombic efficiency (CE). A nitrate additive to the electrolyte is an effective solution, but its low solubility in carbonates is a problem that can be solved using a crown ether, as reported. A rubidium nitrate additive coordinated with 18-crown-6 crown ether stabilizes the LMA in a carbonate electrolyte. The coordination promotes the dissolution of NO3 ions and helps form a dense solid electrolyte interface that is Li3N-rich which guides uniform Li deposition. In addition, the Rb (18-crown-6)+ complexes are adsorbed on the dendrite tips, shielding them from Li deposition on the dendrite tips. A high CE of 97.1% is achieved with a capacity of 1 mAh cm−2 in a half cell, much higher than when using the additive-free electrolyte (92.2%). Such an additive is very compatible with a nickel-rich ternary cathode at a high voltage, and the assembled full battery with a cathode material loading up to 10 mg cm−2 shows an average CE of 99.8% over 200 cycles, indicating a potential for practical use.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2102128
JournalAdvanced Functional Materials
Volume31
Issue number28
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Jul 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • carbonate electrolytes
  • crown ether
  • high voltage cathodes
  • lithium metal batteries
  • nitrate additives

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