
High Capacity Na–O2 Batteries: Key Parameters for Solution-Mediated Discharge
Author(s) -
Lukas Lutz,
Wei Yin,
Alexis Grimaud,
Daniel Alves Dalla Corte,
Mingxue Tang,
Lee Johnson,
Eneko Azaceta,
Vincent SarouKanian,
Andrew J. Naylor,
Said Hamad,
Juan A. Anta,
Elodie Salager,
Ramón TenaZaera,
Peter G. Bruce,
JeanMarie Tarascon
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of physical chemistry. c./journal of physical chemistry. c
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1932-7455
pISSN - 1932-7447
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b07659
Subject(s) - battery (electricity) , cathode , solvent , chemical engineering , crystallite , alkali metal , metal , materials science , capacity loss , ion , nanotechnology , chemistry , electrolyte , electrode , organic chemistry , power (physics) , thermodynamics , metallurgy , physics , engineering
The Na-O2 battery offers an interesting alternative to the Li-O2 battery, which is still the source of a number of unsolved scientific questions. In spite of both being alkali metal-O2 batteries, they display significant dif-ferences. For instance, Li-O2 batteries form Li2O2 as the discharge product at the cathode, whereas Na-O2 batteries usually form NaO2. A very important question that affects the performance of the Na-O2 cell con-cerns the key parameters governing the growth mechanism of the large NaO2 cubes formed upon reduction, which are a requirement of viable capacities and high performance. By comparing glyme-ethers of various chain lengths we show that, the choice of solvent has a tremendous effect on the battery performances. In contrast to the Li-O2 system, high solubilities of the NaO2 discharge product do not necessarily lead to in-creased capacities. Herein we report the profound effect of the Na+ ion solvent shell structure on the NaO2 growth mechanism. Strong solvent-solute interactions in long-chain ethers shift the formation of NaO2 to-wards a surface process resulting in submicrometric crystallites and very low capacities (ca. 0,2 mAh/ cm2(geom)). In contrast, short-chains, which facilitate desolvation and solution-precipitation, promote the for-mation of large cubic crystals (ca. 10 um), enabling high capacities (ca. 7.5 mAh/cm2(geom)). This work provides a new way to look at the key role that solvents play in the metal-air system