Bridging Thermodynamics and Ion Transport in Lithium Batteries via Molecular Design of High-Entropy Electrolytes
Abstract
Although high-entropy electrolytes are promising for stabilizing lithium metal batteries, the intrinsic correlation between thermodynamic entropy and ion transport remains elusive. Herein, we propose a multi-anion electrolyte with elevated configurational entropy (Sconf) and excess entropy (Sex), which successfully breaks the solubility limit of LiNO3 (reaching 0.1 M) in carbonate solvents. This high-entropy environment thermodynamically reshapes the solvation structure, weakening solvent coordination and enhancing anion participation. Based on molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that Li⁺ self-diffusion coefficient follows the classical Rosenfeld scaling relationship with Sex, providing a physical law to describe ion transport in complex electrolytes. Experimentally, this strategy facilitates a compact, inorganic-rich SEI, enabling a high coulombic efficiency of 99.2%, an expanded oxidation window (>4.7 V), and remarkable capacity retention (>86.1% after 400 cycles) in Li||NCM811 full cells. This work establishes a quantitative entropy-based framework for electrolyte design, bridging the gap between microscopic disorder and macroscopic battery performance.
- This article is part of the themed collection: MSDE 10th Anniversary Collection
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