Physical and Electrochemical Properties of Some Phosphonium-Based Ionic Liquids and the Performance of Their Electrolytes in Lithium-Ion Batteries
Author(s) -
Nuha Salem,
Serguei Zavorine,
Donato Nucciarone,
Kristina Whitbread,
Mike Moser,
Yaser AbuLebdeh
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the electrochemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.258
H-Index - 271
eISSN - 1945-7111
pISSN - 0013-4651
DOI - 10.1149/2.0061708jes
Subject(s) - phosphonium , ionic liquid , electrolyte , electrochemistry , imide , lithium (medication) , inorganic chemistry , anode , chemistry , ion , ionic conductivity , thermal stability , cathode , materials science , organic chemistry , electrode , medicine , endocrinology , catalysis
In this work, three ionic liquids with two different cations and two different anions: trimethyl propyl phosphonium bis-fluorosulfonyl imide (P1113FSI), trimethyl isobutyl phosphonium bis-fluorosulfonyl imide (P111i4FSI) and trimethyl isobutyl phosphonium bis-trifluoromethylsulfonyl imide (P111i4TFSI) have been characterized and evaluated as electrolytes in lithium ion half-cells. It is found that ionic liquids with FSI\u2212 anion have superior properties over their TFSI\u2212 counterparts and those with the smaller cation, P1113, have better conductivity and viscosity. The two ionic liquids with FSI anion, P1113FSI and P111i4FSI, are liquid at room temperature and show high conductivities and low viscosities, reaching 10.0 mS/cm and 30 cP at room temperature for P1113FSI. They also exhibit electrochemical windows higher than 5 V and thermal stability exceeding 300\ub0C. Mixing the ionic liquids with 0.5 M LiPF6 increases viscosities, lowers conductivities but improves electrochemical cathodic stability. The electrolyte mixtures have been evaluated in graphite/Li half cells, Li/LiFePO4 and Li/LiMn1.5Ni0.5O4 at C/12 for 100 cycles and at different rates: C/6, C/3, C and 2C for rate capabilities. Battery testing shows that unlike their TFSI\u2212 counterparts both ionic liquids with FSI\u2212 anion perform well with graphite anode and LiFePO4 cathode but fail with the higher voltage LiMn1.5Ni0.5O4 cathode.Peer reviewed: YesNRC publication: Ye
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