Effect of high donor number solvent and cathode morphology on interfacial processes in Li-air batteries

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Abstract

The work is focused on the investigation of the effect of solvent and carbon cathode morphology on the performance of Li-air batteries. Molecular dynamics simulation was used to explore the interfacial behavior of the main reactants (O2 and Li+) of the oxygen reduction reaction in high donor number solvent dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at the following carbon surfaces: graphene plane, graphene edge, nanotube. It was shown that the adsorption barrier of O2 molecules decreases in the order graphene plane > nanotube > graphene edge, leading to the fastest adsorption kinetics on graphene edges. Strong solvation of Li+ in DMSO prevents ions adsorption on defect-free graphene planes and nanotubes, which is qualitatively different from low donor number solvents, such as acetonitrile. It can be concluded from these results, that nucleation and growth of discharge products in DMSO is shifted from the surface towards the solvent bulk that, in turn, leads to capacity increase of Li-air batteries.

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Kislenko, S. A. (2018). Effect of high donor number solvent and cathode morphology on interfacial processes in Li-air batteries. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 946). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/946/1/012029

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