Calcium metal batteries are a promising long-term sustainable alternative to lithium metal batteries due to calcium’s high natural abundance and low electrochemical redox potential. Learning how to control Ca2+ coordination chemistry is essential in enabling high performance and stable calcium batteries. While several spectroscopic and computational studies of Ca2+ coordination have been conducted, they are limited by their qualitative nature and/or require experimental validation. This work introduces a novel methodology using a combination of calorimetric and potentiometric titration techniques, to quantitatively probe electrolyte coordination shell composition, as well as previously unattainable experimental coordination enthalpy, Gibbs free energy, and entropy. To establish the effectiveness of the method, here we investigate the coordination shell thermodynamics in simpler, highly dissociating LiPF6 electrolytes. Starting with a weakly solvated electrolyte, we titrate in a strong solvent—which preferentially coordinates to Li+—and measure the associated heat release/absorption and Li+ potential change with each injection. Fitting both sets of data to a mathematical binding model allows for the extraction of the change in enthalpy (ΔHi), Gibbs free energy (ΔGi), and entropy (ΔSi) associated with each Li+-solvent complex formation. Several weak solvent and strong solvents are investigated to build a dataset of ΔHi, ΔGi, and ΔSi. These thermodynamic values are used to calculate the average coordination number of each solvent in the Li+ coordination shell which agree well with literature. Raman and NMR spectroscopy confirm salt dissociation and solvent displacement during titration. This method unlocks a precise description of the chemical environment around Li+ and enables prediction of the Li+ coordination shell in new electrolytes by rationalizing the hierarchy of solvent binding. Given that this method extends to relevant calcium electrolytes, it is a powerful tool to engineer effective electrolytes for use with a calcium metal anode.
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