Stability enhancing ionic liquid hybrid electrolyte for NVP@C cathode based sodium batteries

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Abstract

Cost-efficient, high-voltage, stable sodium-based cathodes are needed to develop commercial-scale sodium batteries. In this work, a Na 3 V 2 (PO 4 ) 3 /carbon (NVP@C) composite sodium cathode material is synthesized by a novel, facile, two-step, solid state method. This material delivered a discharge capacity of 115 mA h g -1 at 0.5C rate with a conventional organic electrolyte. Improvements in stable cycling were found when NVP@C was paired with a "hybrid" electrolyte comprising a [50:50] v/v mixture of 1 M sodium bis(fluorosulfonyl)amide (NaFSI) in an organic electrolyte and an ionic liquid, N-methyl-N-propyl pyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide (C 3 mpyrTFSI). Sodium batteries based on the NVP@C cathode retained 95% of their initial capacity after 100 cycles at 0.5C rate. We show that the hybrid electrolyte enhanced the electrochemical performance of the NVP@C cathode material by forming a stable SEI (solid-electrolyte interphase) layer on the surface. Electron microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were used to study the SEI layers on electrodes that had been subjected to 100 cycles with hybrid or conventional organic electrolytes. The hybrid electrolyte produced a less resistive, highly Na + ion permeable SEI layer, explaining its superior sodium battery performance, compared to that found with the conventional organic electrolyte.

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Manohar, C. V., Raj, K. A., Kar, M., Forsyth, M., MacFarlane, D. R., & Mitra, S. (2018). Stability enhancing ionic liquid hybrid electrolyte for NVP@C cathode based sodium batteries. Sustainable Energy and Fuels, 2(3), 566–576. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7se00537g

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