New Concepts in Electrolytes

Matthew Li(Argonne National Laboratory), Chunsheng Wang(University of Maryland, College Park), Zhongwei Chen(University of Waterloo), Kang Xu(DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory), Jun Lü(Argonne National Laboratory)
Chemical Reviews
February 5, 2020
Cited by 910Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Over the past decades, Li-ion battery (LIB) has turned into one of the most important advances in the history of technology due to its extensive and in-depth impact on our life. Its omnipresence in all electric vehicles, consumer electronics and electric grids relies on the precisely tuned electrochemical dynamics and interactions among the electrolytes and the diversified anode and cathode chemistries therein. With consumers' demand for battery performance ever increasing, more and more stringent requirements are being imposed upon the established equilibria among these LIB components, and it became clear that the state-of-the-art electrolyte systems could no longer sustain the desired technological trajectory. Driven by such gap, researchers started to explore more unconventional electrolyte systems. From superconcentrated solvent-in-salt electrolytes to solid-state electrolytes, the current research realm of novel electrolyte systems has grown to unprecedented levels. In this review, we will avoid discussions on current state-of-the-art electrolytes but instead focus exclusively on unconventional electrolyte systems that represent new concepts.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis