High thermal and electrochemical stability of PVDF-graft-PAN copolymer hybrid PEO membrane for safety reinforced lithium-ion battery
Abstract
A polyvinylidene fluoride-graft-polyacrylonitrile (PVDF-g-PAN) copolymer was prepared by ozone polymerization and characterized by 1H-NMR. The as-prepared copolymer is a hybrid with polyethylene oxide (PEO), named m-PVDF, and was applied as a conductive gel–polymer electrolyte for lithium-ion batteries. According to morphology analysis, the m-PVDF membrane has less microphase separation than the PVDF blending with the PAN and PEO system (b-PVDF) which means that the PVDF-g-PAN copolymer can increase the compatibility of PVDF and PEO polymers. From the DSC analysis, introduction of PVDF-g-PAN effectively decreases the crystallinity of the PEO polymer in the m-PVDF membrane, which assists in lithium-ion transport. Moreover, m-PVDF shows high thermal stability up to 400 °C and good dimensional-stability under 150 °C, which can prevent the batteries from short-cutting and burning as well as other safety problems at high temperature. For battery application, the membrane shows good electrochemical stability up to 5 V (vs. Li/Li+). Furthermore, cells incorporating the m-PVDF membrane demonstrated remarkably excellent capacity retention with a capacity decay of only 9.1% after 300 cycles. Accordingly, these results suggest that the introduced PVDF-g-PAN significantly improved the electrolyte compatibility, thermal properties and wettability of the membrane, yielding a high-performance and high-safety electrolyte.