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Corrosion of magnesium electrolytes: chlorides – the culprit
221
Citations
22
References
2012
Year
ElectrolytesEngineeringElectrode-electrolyte InterfaceIon Exchange ReactionsMagnesium ElectrolytesChemistryCorrosion InhibitionChemical EngineeringMagnesium DepositionCorrosionSodium BatteryCorrosion ResistanceMaterials ScienceBattery Electrode MaterialsSolid-state BatteryElectrochemistryCorrosion ProtectionLi-ion Battery MaterialsBatteries
Chloride containing magnesium electrolytes are corrosive towards non noble metals. Currently the development of non-corrosive magnesium electrolytes is a key challenge on the road to a rechargeable magnesium battery. The component responsible for corrosion of magnesium electrolytes has not been previously elucidated. Here we clarify that chlorides in the cation (Mg2(μ-Cl)3·6THF)+ are a major culprit for corrosion. We also corroborate the feasibility of ion exchange reactions as a suitable synthetic approach towards magnesium electrolytes which do not contain the cation (Mg2(μ-Cl)3·6THF)+. Our results indicate that magnesium organoborates are an interesting class of magnesium electrolytes which undergo magnesium deposition and dissolution and are non-corrosive in nature at high voltages.
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