Open Access Article
Lei
He
a,
Jian-Hua
Cao
a,
Ya-Kun
Wang
b and
Da-Yong
Wu
*a
aTechnical Institute of Physics and Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 29 Zhong-guan-cun East Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100190, P. R. China. E-mail: dayongwu@mail.ipc.ac.cn
bSchool of Foreign Studies, China University of Political Science and Law, 27 Fuxue Road, Changping District, Beijing 102249, P. R. China
First published on 7th November 2022
Increasing the proportion of inorganic electrolytes in organic–inorganic composite electrolytes can significantly improve the ionic conductivity of composite electrolytes. However, this method is confronted with some problems, such as the uneven dispersion of inorganic electrolytes and the aggregation of nanoparticles, which results in a worse performance of the electrolytes’ interface. In this study, we had the dopamine hydrochloride molecules self-polymerized on the surface of inorganic ionic conductor lithium titanium aluminum phosphate (LATP) particles to obtain PDA-coated LATP nanoparticles. Then, the coated LATP particles were composited with PEO at a ratio of 80
:
20, with the LATP's evenly dispersed in the PEO, and no aggregation happened. On adding a small amount of electrolyte (5 μL cm−2, 1 M Li TFSI), the ionic conductivity of the electrospun PI-loaded PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 flexible composite solid electrolyte reached 2.07 × 10−4 at 30 °C and 2.05 × 10−3 S cm−1 at 80 °C. NCM811‖Li batteries assembled with this electrolyte had an initial discharge capacity of 178.0 mA h g−1 at 30 °C, and still remained at 172.1 mA h g−1 (96.7%) after 200 cycles. The research shows that there are three main conduction pathways of Li+ in this electrolyte: through the segments of the polymer chains, through the interface between the polymer and inorganic ionic conductor, and through the passage composed of a continuous inorganic ionic conductor. Further results show that the coating of LATP by PDA does not block the transmission of Li+ both inside the crystal and at the crystal interface of LATP.
Common inorganic fast lithium–ion conductors include Li1.4Al0.4Ti1.6(PO4)3 (LATP),6 Li10GeP2S12 (LGPS),7 Li7La3Zr2O12 (LLZO)8 and Li0.35La0.55TiO3 (LLTO) etc.,9 which are usually composited with polymer electrolytes in lower proportions. Increasing the proportion of inorganic ionic conductors will improve the ionic conductivity and thermal stability of organic–inorganic composite solid electrolytes. For example, Chen et al. successfully prepared a so-called “polymer in ceramic” composite solid electrolyte containing 80 wt% LLZTO and 20 wt% PEO with a high mechanical strength and safety.10 However, the nanoscale inorganic particles tend to aggregate, which increases the interface resistance between the polymer and the particles and thereby hinders the rapid diffusion of lithium ions.11 Therefore, it is particularly important to solve the problem of agglomeration of a high proportion of inorganic nanoparticles in an organic matrix.12 The conduction pathways of lithium ion in composite solid electrolytes include a ceramic crystal phase, an organic/inorganic interface and a PEO chain segment. There are three possible reasons for the improvement of ion conductivity of composite electrolytes, including reducing the crystallinity of the polymer electrolytes,13 changing the binding state of the lithium ions with polymers,14 and enhancing the transmission of the lithium ions at the polymer/inorganic particle interface.15 In some cases, adding inactive inorganic nanoparticles, such as SiO2 and Al2O3, to polymer electrolytes can also reduce their crystallinity and therefore improve the ionic conductivity. In a previous study, we filled an electrospun PI film with a composite of LATP nanoparticles and PEO (15
:
85) to construct a flexible composite solid electrolyte, and achieved a good battery application performance.16 Meanwhile, we found that when the content of LATP was higher than 15 wt%, the particles were easy to aggregate, the morphology of composite electrolyte was degraded, and the ionic conductivity dropped. Therefore, in this study, we used dopamine17 with a good adhesion on the solid surface to coat LATP nanoparticles so as to improve the doping proportion of LATP in the PEO by way of reducing their surface energy. Afterwards, we loaded LATP–PEO onto an electrospun PI film to make an organic–inorganic composite solid electrolyte, followed by investigating its battery application performance and lithium ion conduction mechanism.
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| Scheme 1 Self-polymerization of dopamine.17 | ||
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| Fig. 1 TEM images of PDA@LATP particles at different magnifications (a–c); EDS mapping of (d) Ti; I P; (f) O; (g) Al; (h) N; (i) C. | ||
:
85, LATP particles agglomerated in the PEO. Therefore, in this study, we increased the ratio of LATP to PEO to 80
:
20, and meanwhile tried to inhibit the agglomeration of LATP particles by coating PDA. When observing the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte membrane through SEM, we found that the LATP particles in the sample were agglomerated (Fig. 2a, red cycle). Compared with the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte membrane, the surface of the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte membrane is smoother and denser.
SEM images show that the LATP particles coated with PDA were evenly dispersed in the PEO matrix, with no aggregation observed (Fig. 2b). Furthermore, we stuck PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 together with PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2, and tested the content of Ti on the cross sections of the two electrolyte membranes using EDS energy spectrum detection. The detection shows that the signal intensity of the Ti element in PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 on the left is significantly higher than that in PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 on the right, demonstrating that LATP is evenly distributed in PEO.
Adding a ceramic filler can reduce the crystallinity of PEO, thereby improving its ionic conductivity.9 We analyzed the phase characteristics of PEO, PEO0.8–LATP0.2, PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 and LATP, and found from the XRD pattern of PEO0.8–LATP0.2 that the characteristic peak of PEO (2θ = 23.2°) is significantly weakened; while from the spectrum of PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 and that of LATP as well (Fig. 3c), no peak of PEO is observed, indicating LATP, which accounts for 80% of the mass in the complex, hinders the crystallization of PEO.
In the LSV test, we found that both PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 and PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 began to generate a redox current after 5 V (Fig. 3d). Their electrochemical stability windows are 5.1 and 5.2 V, respectively, indicating that PI-PEO-LATP is an electrochemically stable system with a high voltage resistance.
The coating of LATP particles with PDA not only can improve the uniform dispersion of LATP particles in PEO, thus increasing the content of LATP in the PI-PEO-LATP composite electrolyte, but also improve the flexibility of the PI-PEO-LATP composite electrolyte. A bending-stretching of the electrolyte membrane was carried out with a self-made machine. The optical photos of the membrane before and after 600 times of bending (Fig. S3, ESI†) show that the appearance of the membrane did not changed even slightly after bending. At the same time, the lithium ion conductivity of the membrane before and after bending was 2.07 × 10−4 S cm−1 and 1.85 × 10−4 S cm−1, respectively (at 30 °C). No significant attenuation of lithium ion conductivity was found.
:
EC = 1
:
1, 5 μL cm−2) between the negative electrode and the electrolyte. The cycle performance of the battery was tested at 30 °C and 0.2C. The results are shown in Fig. 4a. The first discharge capacity of the battery with the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte is 178.0 mA h g−1, and the remaining capacity after 200 cycles is 172.1 mA h g−1 (96.7%), and the coulomb efficiency is close to 100%; in contrast, the discharge capacity of the battery with the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte after 200 cycles is only 124.9 mA h g−1. This resulted from the aggregation and uneven dispersion of LATP particles, which affects the performance of the battery. Fig. 4b is a typical charge and discharge curve of the NCM811‖Li batteries with the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte. The discharge capacity of the battery decayed slowly with the increase in cycling times.
We tested the interface resistance of NCM811‖Li cells with the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte after the 3rd, 30th, 40th and 50th cycles. The results are shown in Fig. 5c. The battery interface resistances after three cycles are 70.07 Ω. After 30, 40 and 50 cycles at 0.2C, the interface resistances increased to 70.67, 75.70 and 79.12 Ω, respectively.
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| Fig. 5 SEM cross-section images of the lithium anode in contact with (a) the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte; (b) the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte. | ||
The discharge capacity of batteries using the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte in the test of rate performance are 179.5, 177.8, 172.1, 167.3, 153.5, 139.2, 122.7 and 105.5 mA h g−1, respectively, at 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 1, 2 and 3C, significantly higher than the values of the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte batteries, i.e., 161.2 and 153.5, 144.6, 128.6, 117.4, 108.6, 99.6 and 36.2 mA h g−1, respectively.
After cycling for 60 cycles at 0.2C and 30 °C, we disassembled the batteries assembled with different electrolytes and found differences in the morphology of the lithium anodes. As shown in Fig. 5, batteries using the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 composite electrolyte had a smoother lithium anode surface and the thickness of the deposition layer was thinner. This is mainly due to the high ionic conductivity of the electrolyte. As mentioned above, the ionic conductivity of the PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte is almost an order of magnitude higher than that of the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte at 30 °C. Moreover, the transport mechanism of the lithium ion in the polymer electrolyte affects the morphology of the lithium metal anode. Xiong et al. carried out a series of theoretical and experimental studies on the electrodeposition of the lithium metal anode by using an electro-chemo-mechanical mode and proved the above statement.20–22
In this work, we coated LATP particles with PDA to improve the dispersion of LATP in PEO. Then, a question arises: does PDA coating block the conduction of Li+ inside inorganic ionic conductors and between particles? To get the answer, we prepared a PI–PEO0.2–PDA@(Al2O3)0.8 electrolyte with the same amount of inactive material Al2O3 nanoparticles instead of LATP, and carried out a control experiment. Nyquist plots of several composite solid electrolytes are shown in Fig. 6.
The test results show that the ionic conductivities of PI–PEO0.2–PDA@(Al2O3)0.8 at 30 and 80 °C are 1.03 × 10−5 and 5.24 × 10−4 S cm−1, respectively, less than both that of PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8, i.e., 2.07 × 10−4 and 2.05 × 10−3 S cm−1, and that of PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2, 5.01 × 10−5 and 9.31 × 10−4 S cm−1 (Table 1) as well. The effect of adding ceramic particles at low temperature so as to improve the ionic conductivity of the composite electrolyte is better than adding them at a high temperature, which can be attributed to the low crystallinity of PEO at a high temperature.
| PI-PEO | PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 | PI–PEO0.8–(Al2O3)0.2 | PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 | PI–PEO0.2–PDA@(Al2O3)0.8 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 °C | 7.94 × 10−6 | 5.01 × 10−5 | 1.03 × 10−5 | 2.07 × 10−4 | 2.94 × 10−5 |
| 80 °C | 3.18 × 10−4 | 9.31 × 10−4 | 5.24 × 10−4 | 2.05 × 10−3 | 5.57 × 10−4 |
It can be concluded from the data in Table 1 that when inactive inorganic nanoparticles are added to PEO, the ionic conductivity of the composite electrolyte increases due to the decrease of the crystallinity of PEO; compared with adding inactive Al2O3 nanoparticles, adding the active ionic conductor LATP has a significantly better effect of improving the ionic conductivity, indicating that LATP plays an important role in ion conduction in the composite electrolyte system. When LATP is coated with PDA, the transport of Li+ through the LATP crystal and the interface between crystals is not blocked. The ionic conductivity of PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 is one order of magnitude higher than that of PI–PEO0.2–PDA@(Al2O3)0.8. When the ratio of LATP to PEO is relatively low, the inorganic ionic conductors are not sufficient to form a continuous Li+ channel in the composite electrolyte, so Li+ conduction mainly depends on the PEO chain segments and PEO–LATP interface. When the proportion of LATP is high and evenly dispersed in PEO, Li+ can conduct between continuous LATP phases in addition to conducting on the PEO chain segments and the PEO-LATP interface, resulting in additional lithium ion transmission channels and, thus, an improved ion conductivity.
000) and lithium trifluoromethylsulfonate amide (LiTFSI, 99.95%) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich Company, USA. Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF, HSV900) is a product of the Arkema Company, France. Lithium chips, battery cases and accessories, and LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 were purchased from Shenzhen kejing Zhida Technology Co. Ltd.
:
Li = 8
:
1 to obtain a 10 wt% solution. The powder of PDA@LATP, four times the weight of PEO in quantity, was mixed with the above solution and magnetic stirred for 24 h to yield a suspension (PDA@LATP
:
PEO = 8
:
2), which was subsequently cast on an electrospun PI film using the method reported in the literature.16 The PDA@LATP and PEO infiltrated into the interstices of the PI fibers to form a flexible composite film after curing. After vacuum drying at 50 °C for 48 h and hot pressing, a PI-PEO-PDA@LATP composite solid electrolyte with a thickness of 30 μm was obtained.
The PI-PEO-PDA@Al2O3 reference samples were prepared by replacing LATP with an equal quantity of nanoscale Al2O3 particles coated with PDA. (C16H36O4Ti, AR), dopamine hydrochloride (C8H11NO2·HCl, 98%) are all products of Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd. Tris–HCl buffer solution (pH = 8.5) was produced by the Shanghai.
The electrochemical stability window of the composite electrolyte assembled into “SS|electrolyte|Li” batteries was tested using linear sweep voltammetry (LSV, 2.5–6 V, 10 mV s−1) of an electrochemical workstation (Zahner Zennium, Germany). The “SS|electrolyte|SS” blocking batteries were tested by the AC impedance method (EIS, scanning range 0.1–106 Hz, amplitude 5 mV). The intersection of the measured AC impedance curve and the real axis is the bulk resistance Rb (Ω) of the separator. Ionic conductivity η (S cm−1) was calculated according to the following formula: η = d/(RbS), wherein, d is the thickness of the electrolyte (cm), and S is the effective area of the electrolyte (cm2).
A self-made apparatus was used to characterize the flexibility of the electrolyte according to the literature.23 The equipment consisted of three devices: a STX trapezoidal screw linear slide, a stepping motor, and a controller. Two ends of the electrolyte film were fixed. During the test, the sliding table drove the sample film to reciprocate in a bending/stretching motion. A demo video of the test is available in the ESI.†
The cathode was produced by dispersing LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2, Super-P, and PVDF evenly into NMP with a mass ratio of 84
:
10
:
6 to obtain a mixture with a solid content of 20%, which was stirred for 12 h to form a uniformly dispersed suspension. Then, the suspension was blade-coated onto an aluminum foil (16 μm). After drying (in an air dry oven for 5 h at 60 °C and in a vacuum oven for 12 h at 120 °C under −0.1 MPa) and a hot-pressing process (80 °C), a NCM811 cathode was obtained with a thickness of 90 μm and a mass loading of 9.1 mg cm−2. With the NCM 811 cathode, PI-PEO-PDA@LATP electrolyte and lithium metal anode, 2032 batteries were assembled. In order to improve the interface performance of the solid electrolyte, 5 μL cm−2 of liquid electrolyte (1 M Li TFSI in DMC
:
EC = 1
:
1) was added onto the surface of lithium metal. All the batteries were assembled in a glove box and tested with a battery test system (CT2001A, Landian Co., Ltd, China).
In this electrolyte, Li+ conduction mainly has three forms: conduction on the chain segment of the PEO amorphous region, conduction on the LATP–PEO interface, and conduction between the continuous LATP phases. The coating of LATP by PDA does not block the transport of Li+ either inside the crystal or at the crystal interface. The NCM811‖Li quasi-solid state batteries assembled with PI–PEO0.2–PDA@LATP0.8 exhibit a good cycle performance: the initial discharge capacity at 30 °C is 178.0 mA h g−1, with the remaining capacity after 200 cycles of 172.1 mA h g−1 (96.7%), and the discharge capacity at a 3C rate is 105.5 mA h g−1, which is significantly superior to that of the PI–PEO0.8–LATP0.2 electrolyte. This is because, after being coated by PDA on their surface, the surface energy of the LATP nanoparticles is reduced, making the LATP particles evenly dispersed in PEO. Meanwhile, the higher LATP content is conducive to the construction of a continuous LATP ion transmission channels in the composite solid electrolyte, which has consequently improved the lithium ion conductivity.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Images before and after dopamine polymerization, contact angles of PEO solution on LATP and PDA@LATP sheet surface, and p of PI-PEO0.2-PDA@LATP0.8 electrolyte membrane before and after bending. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ya00224h |
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