Improving Stability of Li-Ion Batteries by Means of Transition Metal Ions Trapping Separators

Anjan Banerjee anjansc.ac@gmail.com 1 Baruch Ziv 1 Yuliya Shilina 1 Shalom Luski 1 Doron Aurbach 1 Ion C. Halalay 2
1Department of Chemistry, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan
2General Motors R&D Center, General Motors, Warren, Michigan

Transition metal ions dissolution from positive electrodes initiates a well-known degradation mechanism in Li-ion cells, which limits their operational life. Preventing its consequences should be considered as a breakthrough in the field. We show herein that trapping Mn ions by ion-chelating polymers placed in the inter-electrode space of cells with lithium manganate spinel (LMO) and Li or graphite electrodes, and greatly improves their high temperature cycling performance. Mn cations trapping separators were fabricated in-house using a commercial resin consisting of iminodiacetic acid disodium salt functional groups on a styrene divinylbenzene polymeric matrix, either by their inclusion into a separator through a phase-inversion method or by coating onto a plain commercial separator. We determined and compared the surface and cross-section morphologies, electrolyte-uptake, porosity, ionic-conductivity, and electrochemical-stability of these separators with those of a baseline separator. LMO-Li cells containing phase-inversion separators had ∼15x less Mn on the Li-electrode than cells with the baseline separator, after 100 cycles at 55°C. LMO-graphite cells with phase-inversion separators had ∼6x less Mn on the graphite-electrode, after 100 cycles at 55°C than cells with the baseline-separator. Capacity losses after cycling at 55°C were 30% and 55%, respectively, for the cells with phase-inversion and baseline separators.

Reference

  1. J. Electrochem. Soc.,163 (6)A1083-A1094 (2016)
Anjan Banerjee
Dr. Anjan Banerjee
Bar-Ilan University








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