Interfacial Speciation Determines Interfacial Chemistry: X-ray-Induced Lithium Fluoride Formation from Water-in-salt Electrolytes on Solid Surfaces |
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Authors: | Hans-Georg Steinrück Chuntian Cao Maria R. Lukatskaya Christopher J. Takacs Gang Wan David G. Mackanic Yuchi Tsao Jingbo Zhao Brett A. Helms Kang Xu Oleg Borodin James F. Wishart Michael F. Toney |
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Affiliation: | 1. SSRL Materials Science Division, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, CA, 94025 USA;2. Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, USA;3. Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, USA;4. Joint Center for Energy Storage Research, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA;5. Energy Storage Branch, Sensor and Electron Devices Directorate, U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Adelphi, 20783 USA;6. Chemistry Division, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY, 11973 USA |
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Abstract: | Super-concentrated “water-in-salt” electrolytes recently spurred resurgent interest for high energy density aqueous lithium-ion batteries. Thermodynamic stabilization at high concentrations and kinetic barriers towards interfacial water electrolysis significantly expand the electrochemical stability window, facilitating high voltage aqueous cells. Herein we investigated LiTFSI/H2O electrolyte interfacial decomposition pathways in the “water-in-salt” and “salt-in-water” regimes using synchrotron X-rays, which produce electrons at the solid/electrolyte interface to mimic reductive environments, and simultaneously probe the structure of surface films using X-ray diffraction. We observed the surface-reduction of TFSI− at super-concentration, leading to lithium fluoride interphase formation, while precipitation of the lithium hydroxide was not observed. The mechanism behind this photoelectron-induced reduction was revealed to be concentration-dependent interfacial chemistry that only occurs among closely contact ion-pairs, which constitutes the rationale behind the “water-in-salt” concept. |
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Keywords: | aqueous lithium-ion batteries interfaces interphases water-in-salt electrolyte X-ray chemistry |
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