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Nanocomposite quasi-solid-state electrolyte for high-safety lithium batteries

Author(s)
Choi, HyunjiKim, Hyun WooKi, Jae-KwangLim, Young JunKim, YoungsikAhn, Jou-Hyeon
Issued Date
2017-09
DOI
10.1007/s12274-017-1526-2
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/22359
Fulltext
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs12274-017-1526-2
Citation
NANO RESEARCH, v.10, no.9, pp.3092 - 3102
Abstract
Rechargeable lithium batteries are attractive power sources for electronic devices and are being aggressively developed for vehicular use. Nevertheless, problems with their safety and reliability must be solved for the large-scale use of lithium batteries in transportation and grid-storage applications. In this study, a unique hybrid solid-state electrolyte composed of an ionic liquid electrolyte (LiTFSI/Pyr(14)TFSI) and BaTiO3 nanosize ceramic particles was prepared without a polymer. The electrolyte exhibited high thermal stability, a wide electrochemical window, good ionic conductivity of 1.3 x 10(-3) S.cm(-1) at 30 degrees C, and a remarkably high lithium-ion transference number of 0.35. The solid-state LiFePO4 cell exhibited the best electrochemical properties among the reported solid-state batteries, along with a reasonable rate capability. Li/LiCoO2 cells prepared using this nanocomposite solid electrolyte exhibited high performance at both room temperature and a high temperature, confirming their potential as lithium batteries with enhanced safety and a wide range of operating temperatures.
Publisher
TSINGHUA UNIV PRESS
ISSN
1998-0124
Keyword (Author)
charge spacelithium batterynanocompositionsafetysolidified ionic liquid shell
Keyword
TEMPERATURE IONIC LIQUIDSSOGGY SAND ELECTROLYTESPOLYMER ELECTROLYTESCONDUCTIVITYDIFFUSIONNANOPARTICLESCHALLENGESMEMBRANENMR

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