JOURNAL ARTICLE

A Weakly‐Solvating Propylene Carbonate Electrolyte for High‐Voltage and Low‐Temperature Lithium‐Ion Batteries

Chaonan WangShaoyun ZhouZ. XuJiaxuan SheQiang XiaoRong HuangYi CuiYuhao LuHongchang JinHengxing Ji

Year: 2025 Journal:   Angewandte Chemie International Edition Vol: 64 (38)Pages: e202510351-e202510351   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract Next‐generation lithium‐ion batteries (LIBs) require electrolytes compatible with high‐voltage (>4.3 V) and low‐temperature (<−10 °C) operation, yet commercial ethylene carbonate (EC)‐based systems remain constrained by intrinsic limitations including poor oxidation stability at cathode side and high melting points. Although propylene carbonate (PC) demonstrates superior oxidative stability and lower melting temperature than EC, its tendency to cointercalate with Li + within the graphite anode interlayers restricts its applicability in LIBs. We propose a PC‐based weakly‐solvating electrolyte engineered with difluoroethylene carbonate (DFEC) that resolves interfacial challenges at both electrodes. The PC solvent facilitates oxidative resistance through formation of an inorganic‐dominated cathode–electrolyte interphase (CEI), effectively mitigating transition metal dissolution at 4.4 V operation. Simultaneously, DFEC disrupts Li + ‐PC coordination through reduced solvent molecule numbers in the solvation shell, enabling generation of a stable solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) on graphite anodes with minimized interfacial impedance. Implemented in 5 Ah pouch cells, this electrolyte demonstrates 76.7% capacity retention after 2000 cycles (2.8–4.4 V) at room temperature (RT) and maintains 91% of its RT capacity at −20 °C, surpassing conventional EC‐based electrolytes. This work presents an electrolyte engineering approach that synergistically addresses high‐voltage durability and low‐temperature functionality, providing a scalable solution for advanced LIB technologies.

Keywords:
Electrolyte Ethylene carbonate Propylene carbonate Chemical engineering Anode Lithium (medication) Materials science Cathode Dissolution Battery (electricity) Electrochemistry Solvent Dimethyl carbonate Inorganic chemistry Chemistry Electrode Organic chemistry Physical chemistry Catalysis

Metrics

1
Cited By
2.02
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
47
Refs
0.79
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced Battery Materials and Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advancements in Battery Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Advanced battery technologies research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering

Related Documents

© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.