“Water-in-salt” electrolyte enables high-voltage aqueous lithium-ion chemistries
University of Maryland, College Park · DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory
Abstract
A concentrated effort for battery safety Aqueous electrolytes are limited to run below 1.23 V to avoid degradation. Suo et al. smash through this limit with an aqueous salt solution containing lithium (Li) bis(trifluoromethane sulfonyl)imide to create an electrolyte that has an electrochemical window of 3 V (see the Perspective by Smith and Dunn). They used extremely high-concentration solutions, which suppressed hydrogen evolution and electrode oxidation. At these concentrations, the Li solvation shell changes because there simply is not enough water to neutralize the Li + charge. Thus, flammable organic electrolytes could potentially be replaced with a safer aqueous alternative. Science , this issue p. 938 ;…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 78.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 62
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Electrolyte
- Electrochemical window
- Aqueous solution
- Electrochemistry
- Chemistry
- Lithium (medication)
- Salt (chemistry)
- Inorganic chemistry
- Clean water and sanitation