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Poly(ionic liquid) iongel membranes for all solid-state rechargeable sodium battery

journal contribution
posted on 2019-07-15, 00:00 authored by A Fdz De Anastro, N Lago, C Berlanga, M Galcerán, Matthias Hilder, Maria ForsythMaria Forsyth, D Mecerreyes
Sodium-ion is seen as one of the most promising alternative technologies to the current lithium-ion batteries. Sodium is cheap and widely available in comparison to lithium, however new electrode and polymer electrolyte materials need to be found to improve the performance and security of sodium batteries. In this work, we show a new iongel electrolyte with excellent properties for an all solid-state rechargeable sodium batteries. This iongel membrane is based on the poly(dimethyldiallylammonium)polyDADMA-TFSI poly(ionic liquid), N-Propyl-N-methylpyrrolidinium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (C3mpyrFSI)and sodium bis (fluorosulfonyl)imide (NaFSI)the salt. PolyDADMA-TFSI can incorporate up to 50 wt% of C3mpyrFSI ionic liquid content in a self-standing membrane with high ionic conductivity. The increasing the NaFSI concentration in this electrolyte was beneficial for the sodium transference number but detrimental for the ionic conductivity of the membranes. The addition of alumina nanoparticles further improved the membrane mechanical robustness without affecting significantly the ionic conductivity. The iongel membranes presented a wide electrochemical window of 5 V thereby supporting sodium electrochemistry as demonstrated by excellent symmetric sodium cell cycling at 70 ᵒC for 60 cycles. Finally, the electrochemical performance of the optimum composition iongel was evaluated in sodium all solid-state battery using a sodium metal anode and NaFePO4 as the cathode material. The cells show good capacity retention with high coulombic efficiency (>97%)at C rates between C/20 and C/5 achieving 110 mAhg−1 at C/20.

History

Journal

Journal of Membrane Science

Volume

582

Pagination

435 - 441

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0376-7388

eISSN

1873-3123

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, Elsevier B.V.

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