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곽원진

Kwak, Won-Jin
Electrochemical Materials & System Design Lab.
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Oxidation Stability of Organic Redox Mediators as Mobile Catalysts in Lithium–Oxygen Batteries

Author(s)
Kwak, Won-JinPark, JiwonKim, HunJoo, Jung MinAurbach, DoronByon, Hye RyungSun, Yang-Kook
Issued Date
2020-06
DOI
10.1021/acsenergylett.0c00883
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/64857
Citation
ACS ENERGY LETTERS, v.5, no.6, pp.2122 - 2129
Abstract
Employing organic redox mediators (ORMs) for lithium-oxygen (Li-O-2) batteries has emerged as an important strategy to suppress charging overpotentials. Judicious molecular designs of ORMs can also tailor their redox potential and electron-transfer rate to optimize the catalytic efficiency. However, the stability of ORMs in Li-O-2 cells was scarcely studied. Here, the catalytic efficiency and stability of several important ORMs are assessed through in situ gas analysis and reactivity tests with singlet oxygen. Some well-known ORMs are detrimentally decomposed during the first cycle in Li-O-2 cells, whereas nitroxyl-radical-based ORMs bear the most stable and efficient response. Analogous nitroxyl-radical derivatives further increase round-trip energy efficiency and electron-transfer kinetics. This study underlines chemical stability aspects of ORMs, which are mandatory for the long-term cyclability in Li-O-2 cells. We emphasize that besides the importance of ORMs in these systems and their proper selection, an effective operation of Li-O-2 cells depends also strongly on the stability of the carbonaceous cathodes and the electrolyte solutions. The stability of all the components in these systems is inter-related.
Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)
ISSN
2380-8195
Keyword
LI-O-2 BATTERIESELECTROLYTECHEMISTRYDESIGNCELLS

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