Abstract

Single crystal growth and characterization of the lithium bis(trifluoromethyl sulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI), the most common electrolyte salt for lithium-ion batteries, have been performed and succeeded in unraveling the atomic structures of its different crystalline phases. The structures of two crystalline phases (phase I: orthorhombic, Pccn; phase II: monoclinic, P21/c) have been determined through temperature-dependent X-ray crystallography of the LiTFSI single crystal on heating, and the solid-solid phase transformation between phase I and phase II has been dictated. Interestingly, a conformational change of TFSI⁻ from transoid to cisoid has been discovered during the transition from phase I to phase II, which has been further confirmed by the temperature-dependent Raman spectroscopy. The coordination of Li⁺ with the TFSI⁻ ions of different conformations has been also elucidated in the polymorphic crystalline structures. The solid-solid phase transformation of the first-order leads to the cracking of the LiTFSI crystal, probably along the lithium-ion or the fluorine-rich layer in phase II. In the molten state, the coexistence of the transoid conformation and the cisoid conformation is found in the TFSI⁻ ions, affirming the recent observation in the concentrated non-crystalline state. This work is anticipated to shed light on the (de)solvation and the transport of lithium ions in complex fluids encompassing LiTFSI electrolyte solutions from the structural aspects.

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