| Literature DB >> 25183416 |
Jianjun Zhang1, Liping Yue2, Pu Hu1, Zhihong Liu1, Bingsheng Qin1, Bo Zhang1, Qingfu Wang1, Guoliang Ding1, Chuanjian Zhang1, Xinhong Zhou3, Jianhua Yao1, Guanglei Cui1, Liquan Chen4.
Abstract
Inspired by Taichi, we proposed rigid-flexible coupling concept and herein developed a highly promising solid polymer electrolyte comprised of poly (ethylene oxide), poly (cyano acrylate), lithium bis(oxalate)borate and robust cellulose nonwoven. Our investigation revealed that this new class solid polymer electrolyte possessed comprehensive properties in high mechanical integrity strength, sufficient ionic conductivity (3 × 10(-4) S cm(-1)) at 60°C and improved dimensional thermostability (up to 160°C). In addition, the lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4)/lithium (Li) cell using such solid polymer electrolyte displayed superior rate capacity (up to 6 C) and stable cycle performance at 80°C. Furthermore, the LiFePO4/Li battery could also operate very well even at an elevated temperature of 160°C, thus improving enhanced safety performance of lithium batteries. The use of this solid polymer electrolyte mitigates the safety risk and widens the operation temperature range of lithium batteries. Thus, this fascinating study demonstrates a proof of concept of the use of rigid-flexible coupling solid polymer electrolyte toward practical lithium battery applications with improved reliability and safety.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25183416 PMCID: PMC4152750 DOI: 10.1038/srep06272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Design concept of rigid-flexible coupling CCPL solid polymer electrolyte.
(We appreciated Jianjun Zhang for his contribution in designing and drawing Figure 1.)
Figure 2Typical SEM images of (a) cellulose nonwoven membrane, (b) surface image and (c) cross section image of CCPL solid polymer electrolyte. (d) FTIR spectra of cellulose nonwoven membrane and CCPL solid polymer electrolyte.
Figure 3(a) Stress-strain curves for PEO solid polymer electrolyte and CCPL solid polymer electrolyte. (b) DSC curves for cellulose nonwoven, PEO solid polymer electrolyte and CCPL solid polymer electrolyte.
Thermodynamic data for different samples. Melting temperature Tm (onset), melting enthalpy ΔHf, degree of crystallinity and glass transition temperature Tg. The reference melting enthalpy of 100% crystalline PEO is taken as 214.6 J/g−1
| Samples | Tm (°C) | ΔHf (J g−1) | Crystallinity (%) | Tg (°C) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cellulose nonwoven | - | -- | -- | -- | |
| PEO solid polymer electrolyte | 52.9 | 69.7 | 32.5 | −24.9 | |
| CCPL solid polymer electrolyte | 53.6 | 64.8 | 30.7 | −28.8 | |
Figure 4(a) Linear sweep voltammetry obtained for PEO solid polymer electrolyte and CCPL solid polymer electrolyte at 80°C (b) Temperature dependence of ionic conductivity for PEO solid polymer electrolyte and CCPL solid polymer electrolyte.
Figure 5(a) Typical charge-discharge profiles obtained at various rates, (b) cycle performance of LiFePO4/Li cell using CCPL solid polymer electrolyte at 1 C. Temperature: 80°C. (c) Nyquist plots for the LiFePO4/Li cells with CCPL solid polymer electrolyte after the first cycle and after the 1000 cycles test and (d) Illustration of aluminum-pouch-type lithium batteries using LiFePO4 as the cathode and lithium metal as the anode for powering a LED lamp. Temperature: 25°C.
Figure 6(a) Rate performance of LiFePO4/Li cell compared at 60°C, 80°C and 160°C. The black data was taken from ref. 16 for comparison. (b) Typical charge/discharge profiles obtained at various rates from 0.1 C to 10 C for LiFePO4/Li cell using CCPL solid polymer electrolyte. Temperature: 160°C. (c) Charge/discharge curves of LiMn2O4/Li cell using CCPL solid polymer electrolyte compared at first cycle and 55th cycle. Temperature: 60°C. (d) The capacity retention of LiMn2O4/Li cell using CCPL solid polymer electrolyte at 0.5 C. Temperature: 60°C.