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Single-Ion Conducting Polymer Nanoparticles as Functional Fillers for Solid Electrolytes in Lithium Metal Batteries
Author(s) -
Luca Porcarelli,
Preston Sutton,
Vera Bocharova,
Robert Aguirresarobe,
Haijin Zhu,
Nicolas Goujon,
José R. Leiza,
Alexei P. Sokolov,
Maria Forsyth,
David Mecerreyes
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.1c15771
Subject(s) - materials science , electrolyte , ionic conductivity , lithium (medication) , chemical engineering , nanoparticle , surface modification , nanocomposite , fast ion conductor , polymer , lithium battery , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , ionic bonding , ion , composite material , electrode , organic chemistry , chemistry , medicine , engineering , endocrinology
Composite solid electrolytes including inorganic nanoparticles or nanofibers which improve the performance of polymer electrolytes due to their superior mechanical, ionic conductivity, or lithium transference number are actively being researched for applications in lithium metal batteries. However, inorganic nanoparticles present limitations such as tedious surface functionalization and agglomeration issues and poor homogeneity at high concentrations in polymer matrixes. In this work, we report on polymer nanoparticles with a lithium sulfonamide surface functionality (LiPNP) for application as electrolytes in lithium metal batteries. The particles are prepared by semibatch emulsion polymerization, an easily up-scalable technique. LiPNPs are used to prepare two different families of particle-reinforced solid electrolytes. When mixed with poly(ethylene oxide) and lithium bis(trifluoromethane)sulfonimide (LiTFSI/PEO), the particles invoke a significant stiffening effect ( E ' > 10 6 Pa vs 10 5 Pa at 80 °C) while the membranes retain high ionic conductivity (σ = 6.6 × 10 -4 S cm -1 ). Preliminary testing in LiFePO 4 lithium metal cells showed promising performance of the PEO nanocomposite electrolytes. By mixing the particles with propylene carbonate without any additional salt, we obtain true single-ion conducting gel electrolytes, as the lithium sulfonamide surface functionalities are the only sources of lithium ions in the system. The gel electrolytes are mechanically robust (up to G ' = 10 6 Pa) and show ionic conductivity up to 10 -4 S cm -1 . Finally, the PC nanocomposite electrolytes were tested in symmetrical lithium cells. Our findings suggest that all-polymer nanoparticles could represent a new building block material for solid-state lithium metal battery applications.

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