This is a demo store. No orders will be fulfilled.

Amino-modified UiO-66-NH2 reinforced polyurethane based polymer electrolytes for high-voltage solid-state lithium metal batteries

Nano Research [2024]
Huang Danru, Wu Lin, Kang Qi, Shen Zhiyong, Huang Qiaosheng, Lin Wenjie, Pei Fei, Huang Yunhui
ABSTRACT

Solid-state polymer electrolytes (SPEs) are candidate schemes for meeting the safety and energy density needs of advanced lithium-based battery because of their improved mechanical and electrochemical stability compared to traditional liquid electrolytes. However, low ionic conductivity and side reactions occurring in traditional high-voltage lithium metal batteries (LMBs) hinder their practical applications. Here, amino-modified metal-organic frameworks (UiO-66-NH 2 ) with abundant defects as multifunctional fillers in the polyurethane based SPEs achieve the collaborative promotion of the mechanical strength and room temperature ionic conductivity. The surface modified amino groups serve as anchoring points for oxygen atoms of polymer chains, forming a firmly hydrogen-bond interface with polycarbonate-based polyurethane frameworks. The rich interfaces between UiO-66-NH 2 and polymers dramatically decrease the crystallization of polymer chains and reduce ion transport impedance, which markedly boosted the ionic conductivity to 2.1 × 10 −4 S·cm −1 with a high Li + transference numbers of 0.71. As a result, LiFePO 4 ∣SPEs∣Li cells exhibit prominent cyclability for 700 cycles under 0.5 C with 96.5% capacity retention. The LiNi 0.6 Co 0.2 Mn 0.2 O 2 (NCM622)∣SPEs∣Li cells deliver excellent long-term lifespan for 260 cycles with a high capacity retention of 91.9% and high average Coulombic efficiency (98.5%) under ambient conditions. This simple and effective hybrid SPE design strategy sheds a milestone significance light for high-voltage Li-metal batteries.

MATERIALS

Shall we send you a message when we have discounts available?

Remind me later

Thank you! Please check your email inbox to confirm.

Oops! Notifications are disabled.