Compliant glass-polymer hybrid single ion-conducting electrolytes for lithium batteries

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Abstract

Despite high ionic conductivities, current inorganic solid electrolytes cannot be used in lithium batteries because of a lack of compliance and adhesion to active particles in battery electrodes as they are discharged and charged. We have successfully developed a compliant, nonflammable, hybrid single ion-conducting electrolyte comprising inorganic sulfide glass particles covalently bonded to a perfluoropolyether polymer. The hybrid with 23 wt% perfluoropolyether exhibits low shear modulus relative to neat glass electrolytes, ionic conductivity of 10-4 S/cm at room temperature, a cation transference number close to unity, and an electrochemical stability window up to 5 V relative to Li+/Li. X-ray absorption spectroscopy indicates that the hybrid electrolyte limits lithium polysulfide dissolution and is, thus, ideally suited for Li-S cells. Our work opens a previously unidentified route for developing compliant solid electrolytes that will address the challenges of lithium batteries.

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Villaluenga, I., Wujcik, K. H., Tong, W., Devaux, D., Wong, D. H. C., DeSimone, J. M., & Balsara, N. P. (2016). Compliant glass-polymer hybrid single ion-conducting electrolytes for lithium batteries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(1), 52–57. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1520394112

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