Anion Association Strength as a Unifying Descriptor for the Reversibility of Divalent Metal Deposition in Nonaqueous Electrolytes

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Aug 12;12(32):36137-36147. doi: 10.1021/acsami.0c09404. Epub 2020 Jul 29.

Abstract

Developing next-generation battery chemistries that move beyond traditional Li-ion systems is critical to enabling transformative advances in electrified transportation and grid-level energy storage. In this work, we provide the first evidence for common descriptors for improved reversibility of metal plating/stripping in nonaqueous electrolytes for multivalent ion batteries. Focusing first on the specific role of chloride (Cl-) in promoting electrochemical reversibility in multivalent systems, rotating disk (RDE) and ring-disk electrode (RRDE) investigations were performed utilizing a variety of divalent cations (Mg2+, Zn2+, and Cu2+) and the bis-(trifluoromethane sulfonyl) imide (TFSI-) anion. By introducing varying concentrations of Cl-, a cooperative effect is observed between TFSI- and Cl- that yields the more reversible behavior of mixed electrolytes relative to electrolytes containing only TFSI-. This effect is shown to be general for Mg, Zn, and Cu electrodeposition, and mechanistic understanding of the role of Cl- in improving reversibility of TFSI-based electrolytes is obtained through the combination of R(R)DE experimental results and density functional theory (DFT) evaluation of the redox activity and thermodynamic stability of various TFSI- and Cl-based solution complexes of metal ions. The cooperative anion effect is further generalized to other mixed-anion systems, where systematic variations in anion association strength predicted from DFT (i.e., Cl- > OTf- ≈ TFSI- > BF4- > PF6-) yield corresponding trends in redox potentials and improvements of ≥200 mV in the reversibility of metal deposition/dissolution. These results identify anion association strength as a common descriptor for the reversibility of divalent metal anodes and suggest a set of general design principles for developing new electrolytes with improved activity and stability.

Keywords: battery; electrochemistry; electrolyte design; magnesium; metal deposition; zinc.