Abstract
Solid polymer electrolytes (SPEs) offer potential advantages over liquid electrolytes, including flexibility, safety, and processability. However, they suffer from low room-temperature ionic conductivity. Recently, it has been reported a poly(ethyl acrylate) based (polyEA) SPE, by incorporating 50 wt% of succinonitrile (SN) solid plasticizer, 30 wt% of lithium salt and 5 wt% of fluoroethylene carbonate additive, which achieves a high room-temperature ionic conductivity of 1.01 × 10−3 S cm−1 (Nat. Nanotechnol, 2022, 17, 768-776). This novel SPE exhibits stability against Li0 and anodic stability up to 4.9 V vs Li+/Li. However, the specific mechanism responsible for its high ionic conductivity remains elusive. In this work, by adjusting the weight ratio of SN in the SPE, a transition from Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann to Arrhenius ion-conducting behavior is observed. It is demonstrated that the addition of SN leads to the gradual decoupling of Li-ion from the polymer backbone and its coordination with SN, as revealed by 6Li solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. As a result, Li-ion migration primarily occurs through SN rather than the segmental motion of the polymer backbone. Performances of the SPE in Cu||Li, Li||Li and a LiFePO4||Li pouch cells are shown to demonstrate the commercial viability of this SPE in Li0-anode solid-state batteries.
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