Abstract

TiO2 is achieved by causing the PAVM:TiO2 polymer framework to swell in 1 M LiPF6 in carbonate solvent. Raman analysis results demonstrate that the poly(acrylonitrile) (PAN) segments and TiO2 nanoparticles strongly adsorb PF6(-) anions, thereby generating 3D percolative space-charge pathways surrounding the polymer framework for Li(+)-ion transport. The ionic conductivity of TiO2 is nearly 1 order of magnitude higher than that of commercial separator-supported liquid electrolyte (SLE). TiO2 has a high Li(+) transference number (0.7), indicating that most of the PF6(-) anions are stationary, which suppresses PF6(-) decomposition and substantially enlarges the voltage that can be applied to TiO2 (to 6.5 V vs Li/Li(+)). Immobilization of PF6(-) anions also leads to the formation of stable solid-electrolyte interface (SEI) layers in a full-cell graphite|electrolyte|LiFePO4 battery, which exhibits low SEI and overall resistances. The graphite|electrolyte|LiFePO4 battery delivers high capacity of 84 mAh g(-1) even at 20 C and presents 90% and 71% capacity retention after 100 and 1000 charge-discharge cycles, respectively. This study demonstrates a GPE architecture comprising 3D space charge pathways for Li(+) ions and suppresses anion decomposition to improve the stability and lifespan of the resulting LIBs.

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