Reversible Sodium Metal Electrodes: Is Fluorine an Essential Interphasial Component?

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Abstract

Alkaline metals are an ideal negative electrode for rechargeable batteries. Forming a fluorine-rich interphase by a fluorinated electrolyte is recognized as key to utilizing lithium metal electrodes, and the same strategy is being applied to sodium metal electrodes. However, their reversible plating/stripping reactions have yet to be achieved. Herein, we report a contrary concept of fluorine-free electrolytes for sodium metal batteries. A sodium tetraphenylborate/monoglyme electrolyte enables reversible sodium plating/stripping at an average Coulombic efficiency of 99.85 % over 300 cycles. Importantly, the interphase is composed mainly of carbon, oxygen, and sodium elements with a negligible presence of fluorine, but it has both high stability and extremely low resistance. This work suggests a new direction for stabilizing sodium metal electrodes via fluorine-free interphases.

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Doi, K., Yamada, Y., Okoshi, M., Ono, J., Chou, C. P., Nakai, H., & Yamada, A. (2019). Reversible Sodium Metal Electrodes: Is Fluorine an Essential Interphasial Component? Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 58(24), 8024–8028. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201901573

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