Weak Cation-Solvent Interactions in Ether-Based Electrolytes Stabilizing Potassium-ion Batteries

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2022 Aug 15;61(33):e202208291. doi: 10.1002/anie.202208291. Epub 2022 Jul 8.

Abstract

Conventional ether-based electrolytes exhibited a low polarization voltage in potassium-ion batteries, yet suffered from ion-solvent co-intercalation phenomena in a graphite anode, inferior potassium-metal performance, and limited oxidation stability. Here, we reveal that weakening the cation-solvent interactions could suppress the co-intercalation behaviour, enhance the potassium-metal performance, and improve the oxidation stability. Consequently, the graphite anode exhibits K+ intercalation behaviour (K||graphite cell operates 200 cycles with 86.6 % capacity retention), the potassium metal shows highly stable plating/stripping (K||Cu cell delivers 550 cycles with average Coulombic efficiency of 98.9 %) and dendrite-free (symmetric K||K cell operates over 1400 hours) properties, and the electrolyte exhibits high oxidation stability up to 4.4 V. The ion-solvent interaction tuning strategy provides a promising method to develop high-performance electrolytes and beyond.

Keywords: Ether-Based Electrolytes; Graphite Anodes; Interfacial Chemistry; Potassium-Ion Batteries; Weak Ion-Solvent Interactions.