Texas Materials Institute and Materials Science and Engineering Program, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, USA.
J Am Chem Soc. 2013 Jan 30;135(4):1167-76. doi: 10.1021/ja3091438. Epub 2013 Jan 18.
Each cell of a battery stores electrical energy as chemical energy in two electrodes, a reductant (anode) and an oxidant (cathode), separated by an electrolyte that transfers the ionic component of the chemical reaction inside the cell and forces the electronic component outside the battery. The output on discharge is an external electronic current I at a voltage V for a time Δt. The chemical reaction of a rechargeable battery must be reversible on the application of a charging I and V. Critical parameters of a rechargeable battery are safety, density of energy that can be stored at a specific power input and retrieved at a specific power output, cycle and shelf life, storage efficiency, and cost of fabrication. Conventional ambient-temperature rechargeable batteries have solid electrodes and a liquid electrolyte. The positive electrode (cathode) consists of a host framework into which the mobile (working) cation is inserted reversibly over a finite solid-solution range. The solid-solution range, which is reduced at higher current by the rate of transfer of the working ion across electrode/electrolyte interfaces and within a host, limits the amount of charge per electrode formula unit that can be transferred over the time Δt = Δt(I). Moreover, the difference between energies of the LUMO and the HOMO of the electrolyte, i.e., electrolyte window, determines the maximum voltage for a long shelf and cycle life. The maximum stable voltage with an aqueous electrolyte is 1.5 V; the Li-ion rechargeable battery uses an organic electrolyte with a larger window, which increase the density of stored energy for a given Δt. Anode or cathode electrochemical potentials outside the electrolyte window can increase V, but they require formation of a passivating surface layer that must be permeable to Li(+) and capable of adapting rapidly to the changing electrode surface area as the electrode changes volume during cycling. A passivating surface layer adds to the impedance of the Li(+) transfer across the electrode/electrolyte interface and lowers the cycle life of a battery cell. Moreover, formation of a passivation layer on the anode robs Li from the cathode irreversibly on an initial charge, further lowering the reversible Δt. These problems plus the cost of quality control of manufacturing plague development of Li-ion rechargeable batteries that can compete with the internal combustion engine for powering electric cars and that can provide the needed low-cost storage of electrical energy generated by renewable wind and/or solar energy. Chemists are contributing to incremental improvements of the conventional strategy by investigating and controlling electrode passivation layers, improving the rate of Li(+) transfer across electrode/electrolyte interfaces, identifying electrolytes with larger windows while retaining a Li(+) conductivity σ(Li) > 10(-3) S cm(-1), synthesizing electrode morphologies that reduce the size of the active particles while pinning them on current collectors of large surface area accessible by the electrolyte, lowering the cost of cell fabrication, designing displacement-reaction anodes of higher capacity that allow a safe, fast charge, and designing alternative cathode hosts. However, new strategies are needed for batteries that go beyond powering hand-held devices, such as using electrode hosts with two-electron redox centers; replacing the cathode hosts by materials that undergo displacement reactions (e.g. sulfur) by liquid cathodes that may contain flow-through redox molecules, or by catalysts for air cathodes; and developing a Li(+) solid electrolyte separator membrane that allows an organic and aqueous liquid electrolyte on the anode and cathode sides, respectively. Opportunities exist for the chemist to bring together oxide and polymer or graphene chemistry in imaginative morphologies.
每个电池单元都将电能存储在两个电极(还原剂(阳极)和氧化剂(阴极))中的化学能中,这两个电极由电解质隔开,电解质可传输电池内部的化学反应的离子成分,并迫使电子组件位于电池外部。在放电时,输出是在电压 V 下经过时间 Δt 的外部电流 I。可充电电池的化学反应必须在施加充电 I 和 V 的情况下可逆。可充电电池的关键参数是安全性、在特定功率输入下可存储的能量密度以及在特定功率输出下可检索的能量密度、循环寿命和搁置寿命、存储效率以及制造成本。传统的环境温度可充电电池具有固体电极和液体电解质。正极(阴极)由主体框架组成,可在有限的固溶范围内可逆地插入移动(工作)阳离子。固溶范围在更高电流下通过工作离子在电极/电解质界面上和主体内的传输速率减小,限制了每个电极公式单元在时间 Δt = Δt(I) 内可转移的电荷量。此外,电解质的 LUMO 和 HOMO 之间的能量差,即电解质窗口,决定了长搁置和循环寿命的最大电压。在水性电解质中最大稳定电压为 1.5 V;锂离子可充电电池使用具有更大窗口的有机电解质,这增加了给定 Δt 的存储能量密度。电解质窗口外的阳极或阴极电化学势可以增加 V,但它们需要形成钝化表面层,该表面层必须对 Li(+)可渗透,并且能够在电极随循环改变体积时快速适应不断变化的电极表面积。钝化表面层增加了穿过电极/电解质界面的 Li(+)转移的阻抗,并降低了电池单元的循环寿命。此外,在初始充电时,在阳极上形成钝化层会不可逆地从阴极夺走 Li,进一步降低了可逆的 Δt。这些问题加上制造质量控制的成本困扰着锂离子可充电电池的发展,使其无法与内燃机竞争,为电动汽车提供动力,也无法提供所需的低成本可再生风能和/或太阳能产生的电能存储。化学家通过研究和控制电极钝化层、提高 Li(+)在电极/电解质界面上的传输速率、在保留 Li(+)电导率σ(Li) > 10(-3) S cm(-1)的同时识别具有更大窗口的电解质、合成减少活性颗粒尺寸的电极形态,同时将它们固定在通过电解质可到达的大表面积的电流收集器上、降低电池制造的成本、设计具有更高容量的置换反应阳极,允许安全、快速充电、设计替代阴极主体,从而对传统策略进行渐进式改进,为电池做出了贡献。然而,需要新的策略来制造超越手持式设备的电池,例如使用具有双电子氧化还原中心的电极主体;通过液体阴极取代阴极主体,液体阴极可能含有可流动的氧化还原分子,或者通过空气阴极的催化剂;并开发允许在阳极和阴极侧分别使用有机和水性液体电解质的 Li(+)固体电解质分离膜。化学家有机会将氧化物和聚合物或石墨烯化学结合在一起,形成富有想象力的形态。