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A lithium–oxygen battery with a long cycle life in an air-like atmosphere
Author(s) -
Mohammad Asadi,
Baharak Sayahpour,
Pedram Abbasi,
Anh T. Ngo,
Klas Karis,
Jacob R. Jokisaari,
Cong Liu,
Badri Narayanan,
Marc Gerard,
Poya Yasaei,
Xuan Hu,
Arijita Mukherjee,
Kah Chun Lau,
Rajeev S. Assary,
Fatemeh KhaliliAraghi,
Robert F. Klie,
Larry A. Curtiss,
Amin SalehiKhojin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature25984
Subject(s) - lithium (medication) , battery (electricity) , anode , electrolyte , oxygen , cathode , lithium vanadium phosphate battery , atmosphere (unit) , chemistry , materials science , chemical engineering , inorganic chemistry , electrode , organic chemistry , thermodynamics , medicine , power (physics) , physics , engineering , endocrinology
Lithium-air batteries are considered to be a potential alternative to lithium-ion batteries for transportation applications, owing to their high theoretical specific energy. So far, however, such systems have been largely restricted to pure oxygen environments (lithium-oxygen batteries) and have a limited cycle life owing to side reactions involving the cathode, anode and electrolyte. In the presence of nitrogen, carbon dioxide and water vapour, these side reactions can become even more complex. Moreover, because of the need to store oxygen, the volumetric energy densities of lithium-oxygen systems may be too small for practical applications. Here we report a system comprising a lithium carbonate-based protected anode, a molybdenum disulfide cathode and an ionic liquid/dimethyl sulfoxide electrolyte that operates as a lithium-air battery in a simulated air atmosphere with a long cycle life of up to 700 cycles. We perform computational studies to provide insight into the operation of the system in this environment. This demonstration of a lithium-oxygen battery with a long cycle life in an air-like atmosphere is an important step towards the development of this field beyond lithium-ion technology, with a possibility to obtain much higher specific energy densities than for conventional lithium-ion batteries.

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