High entropy liquid electrolytes for lithium batteries

Qidi Wang(Delft University of Technology), Chenglong Zhao(Delft University of Technology), Jianlin Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhenpeng Yao(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Shuwei Wang(University Town of Shenzhen), Sai Govind Hari Kumar(University of Toronto), Swapna Ganapathy(Delft University of Technology), Stephen Eustace(Delft University of Technology), Xuedong Bai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Baohua Li(University Town of Shenzhen), Marnix Wagemaker(Delft University of Technology)
Nature Communications
January 27, 2023
Cited by 264Open Access
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Abstract

High-entropy alloys/compounds have large configurational entropy by introducing multiple components, showing improved functional properties that exceed those of conventional materials. However, how increasing entropy impacts the thermodynamic/kinetic properties in liquids that are ambiguous. Here we show this strategy in liquid electrolytes for rechargeable lithium batteries, demonstrating the substantial impact of raising the entropy of electrolytes by introducing multiple salts. Unlike all liquid electrolytes so far reported, the participation of several anionic groups in this electrolyte induces a larger diversity in solvation structures, unexpectedly decreasing solvation strengths between lithium ions and solvents/anions, facilitating lithium-ion diffusivity and the formation of stable interphase passivation layers. In comparison to the single-salt electrolytes, a low-concentration dimethyl ether electrolyte with four salts shows an enhanced cycling stability and rate capability. These findings, rationalized by the fundamental relationship between entropy-dominated solvation structures and ion transport, bring forward high-entropy electrolytes as a composition-rich and unexplored space for lithium batteries and beyond.


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