JOURNAL ARTICLE

A High-Voltage Aqueous Electrolyte for Sodium-Ion Batteries

Ruben‐Simon KühnelDavid ReberCorsin Battaglia

Year: 2018 Journal:   ECS Meeting Abstracts Vol: MA2018-02 (2)Pages: 93-93   Publisher: Institute of Physics

Abstract

Aqueous sodium-ion batteries promise increased operational safety and lower cost compared to current state-of-the-art lithium-ion batteries based on organic electrolytes. For large-scale stationary systems, which find increasing application in the grid integration of electricity generated from intermittent renewable sources, these advantages of aqueous electrolyte batteries could translate into lower total-cost-of-ownership compared to organic electrolyte batteries. The major disadvantage of water as electrolyte solvent for batteries is its intrinsically narrow electrochemical stability window (thermodynamically only 1.23 V) limiting maximum cell voltage and consequently the battery’s energy density. We recently discovered an aqueous sodium-ion electrolyte system with a much enhanced electrochemical stability window. The wide stability window of 2.6 V for 35m aqueous NaFSI solutions broadens the choice of suitable active materials for aqueous sodium-ion batteries. We demonstrate stable cycling of a NaTi 2 (PO 4 ) 3 anode and a Na 3 (VOPO 4 ) 2 F cathode in this aqueous electrolyte enabling the fabrication of high-voltage rechargeable aqueous sodium-ion batteries and discuss route to further increase the cell voltage. R.-S. Kühnel, D. Reber, C. Battaglia, ACS Energy Letters 2017, 2, 2005

Keywords:
Electrolyte Electrochemistry Aqueous solution Battery (electricity) Anode Electrochemical window Cathode Materials science Energy storage Sodium Chemical engineering Chemistry Inorganic chemistry Electrode Ionic conductivity Organic chemistry Thermodynamics

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Advancements in Battery Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
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Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
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