Publication | Open Access
Selectively fluorinated aromatic lithium salts regulate the solvation structure and interfacial chemistry for all-solid-state batteries
49
Citations
78
References
2025
Year
Solid polymer electrolytes suffer from the polymer-dominated Li<sup>+</sup> solvation structure, causing unstable electrolyte/electrode interphases and deteriorated battery performance. Here, we design a class of selectively fluorinated aromatic lithium salts (SFALS) as single conducting lithium salts to regulate the solvation structure and interfacial chemistry for all-solid-state lithium metal batteries. By tuning the anionic structure, the Li<sup>+</sup>-polyether coupling is weakened, and the Li<sup>+</sup>-anion coordination is enhanced. The hydrogen bonding between the SFALS and polymer matrix induces a special "triad"-type solvation structure, which improves the electrolyte homogeneity and mechanical strength, and promotes the formation of an ultrathin and robust Li<sub>2</sub>O-rich solid electrolyte interphase. Therefore, the stable cycling of more than 1650 cycles (Coulombic efficiency, 99.8%) for LiFePO<sub>4</sub>/Li half cells and 580 cycles (97.4% capacity retention) for full cells is achieved. This molecular engineering strategy could inspire further advancements of functional lithium salts for practical application of all-solid-state lithium metal batteries.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1