Are Weakly Coordinating Anions Really the Holy Grail of Ternary Solid Polymer Electrolytes Plasticized by Ionic Liquids? Coordinating Anions to the Rescue of the Lithium Ion Mobility (2208.03245v1)
Abstract: Lithium salts with low coordinating anions like bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (TFSI) have been the state-of-the-art for PEO-based 'dry' polymer electrolytes for three decades. Plasticizing PEO with TFSI-based ionic liquids (ILs) to form ternary solid polymer electrolytes (TSPEs) increases conductivity and Li$+$ diffusivity. However, the Li$+$ transport mechanism is unaffected compared to their 'dry' counterpart and essentially coupled to the dynamics of the polymer host matrix, which limits Li$+$ transport improvement. Thus, a paradigm shift is hereby suggested: The utilization of more coordinating anions such as trifluoromethanesulfonyl-N-cyanoamide (TFSAM), able to compete with PEO for Li$+$ solvation to accelerate the Li$+$ transport and reach higher Li$+$ transference number. The Li-TFSAM interaction in binary and ternary TFSAM-based electrolytes was probed by experimental methods and discussed in the context of recent computational results. In PEO-based TSPEs, TFSAM drastically accelerates the Li$+$ transport (increased Li$+$ transference number by 600$\%$ and Li$+$ conductivity by 200-300$\%$) and computer simulations reveal that lithium dynamics are effectively re-coupled from polymer to anion dynamics. Finally, this concept of coordinating anions in TSPEs was successfully applied in LFP$||$Li metal cells leading to enhanced capacity retention (86$\%$ after 300 cycles) and an improved rate performance at 2C.