This disclosure relates to rechargeable batteries, in particular, rechargeable batteries utilizing a polyaniline/graphene-based material as a component of the battery cathode.
Rechargeable batteries are a type of secondary battery that can be recharged and used multiple times, making them an environmentally friendly and cost-effective alternative to disposable batteries. They are widely used in portable electronic devices such as smartphones, laptops, and cameras, as well as in larger applications like electric vehicles and energy storage systems. The most common types of rechargeable batteries are nickelcadmium (NiCad), nickel-metal Hydride (NiMH), and Lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries. Each type of rechargeable battery has its own unique characteristics, including energy density, voltage, and discharge rate, making them well-suited for different applications. Rechargeable batteries must be properly maintained, including being stored correctly, recharged correctly, and being used within the operating temperature range to ensure their performance and longevity. Lightweight rechargeable batteries possessing high charge/discharge energy capacity is a quest of autonomous energetics.
A typical metal-ion battery includes an anode, a cathode, and a liquid electrolyte separating the anode and cathode. The electrolyte is a solution that contains ions, which serve as the charge carriers between the anode and cathode. When the battery is charged, these ions move from the anode to the cathode through the electrolyte, and when the battery is discharged, they move in the opposite direction.
The separator in a liquid electrolyte battery acts as a barrier between the anode and cathode, preventing short-circuits while allowing the ionic flow. The separator is a porous material, usually made of polypropylene, that is soaked in the electrolyte. It allows the flow of ions while retaining the structure of the battery. The separator plays a crucial role in maintaining the stability and safety of the battery, ensuring that the battery operates smoothly and efficiently.
The active material of the anode in a lithium-ion battery is usually based on a graphite substrate which has a theoretical charge capacity of 372 mAh/g. The electrolyte usually consists of a solution of the corresponding metal salt or mixture of salts in an organic solvent, or mixture of organic solvents. Such liquid electrolytes are usually located within the pores of both the anode and cathode with a separator such as polypropylene between them. The quantity and concentration of the liquid electrolyte plays a role in simultaneously providing the lowest battery weight and highest level of ion conductivity.
The cathode active material is usually based on a lithiated transition metal, e.g., nickel-, cobalt-, or manganese, oxides or lithium iron phosphate. Detrimentally, the theoretical charge capacity of such cathode active materials is usually about or below 200 mAh/g. (R. Schmuch et al., “Performance and cost of materials for lithium-based rechargeable automotive batteries”, Nat. Energy. 2018, Vol. 3, P. 267.) Cathode active materials based on transition metal compounds possess other adverse properties that motivate an urgent demand for new cathode active materials, providing significant improvement in battery capacity. (J.-M. Kim et al., “A review on the stability and surface modification of layered transition-metal oxide cathodes”, Materials Today, 2021, Vol. 46, p. 155: G.-L. Xu et al., “Challenges and Strategies to Advance High-Energy Nickel-Rich Layered Lithium Transition Metal Oxide Cathodes for Harsh Operation”, Adv. Func. Mater., 2020, Vol. 30, 2004748: W. Li., “Review—An Unpredictable Hazard in Lithium-ion Batteries from Transition Metal Ions: Dissolution from Cathodes, Deposition on Anodes and Elimination Strategies”, J. Electrochem. Soc., 2020, Vol. 167, 090514.)
Conductive conjugated polymers are a class of polymers that are both electrically conductive and conjugated. Conjugated polymers are materials with a repeating pattern of alternating single and double bonds along the polymer backbone. This alternating arrangement allows for the movement of electrons along the polymer chain, thereby providing electrical conductivity. They are also lightweight and flexible, which makes them ideal for use in wearable devices and flexible electronics. Additionally, they have excellent stability and thermal resistance, making them suitable for use in high-temperature environments.
Conducting conjugated polymers can be an alternative to cathode active materials based on transition metal compounds. For example, polyaniline (PANI) is redox active and is capable of reversible electrochemical transitions at high potentials. These features make PANI a potential candidate for the active component of battery cathodes. (O. A. Kozarenko et al., “Effect of potential range on electrochemical performance of polyaniline as a component of lithium battery electrodes”, Electrochim. Acta, 2015, Vol. 184, p. 111.)
It is known that chemically synthesized PANI doped with HCl is characterized by a specific capacity of about 20 mAh/g in a mixture of ethylene carbonate/dimethyl carbonate/1M LiPF6 electrolyte, which is about 14% of the theoretical capacity of 147 mAh/g utilizing 50% doping of PANI macromolecules. (K. S. Ryu et al., “Comparison of lithium/polyaniline secondary batteries with different dopants of HCl and lithium ionic salts”, J. Power Sources, 2000, Vol. 88, P. 197-201: A. J. Heeger, “Nobel Lecture: Semiconducting and metallic polymers: The fourth generation of polymeric materials”, Rev. Mod. Phys . . . 2001. Vol. 73. P. 681: A. G. MacDiarmid. “Synthetic Metals: A Novel Role for Organic Polymers (Nobel Lecture)”, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2001, 40, 2581: P. Novák et al., “Electrochemically active polymers for rechargeable batteries”, Chem. Rev., 1997, Vol. 97. P. 207.)
It is also known that chemically synthesized PANI doped with lithium salts can exhibit a specific capacity about 100 mAh/g in an analogous electrolyte, representing about 70% of the theoretical capacity. (K. S. Ryu et al., “Polyaniline doped with dimethyl sulfate as a polymer electrode for all solid-state power source system”, Solid State Ionics. 2004, Vol. 175, P. 759.) PANI can also be electrochemically synthesized, purporting a specific capacity of about 100 mAh/g in an organic electrolyte. (H. Daifuku et al., “Electric cells utilizing polyaniline as a positive electrode active material, U.S. Pat. No. 4,717,634 (1988).)
Furthermore yet, PANI doped with lithium salts may be mechanochemically prepared, exhibiting a specific capacity of 146 mAh/g in an organic electrolyte. The resulting capacity is nearly 100% of the theoretical capacity limit utilizing 50% doping of the polymer macromolecules. (O. Posudievsky et al., “Electrochemical performance of mechanochemically prepared polyaniline doped with lithium salt”, Synth. Met., 2012. Vol. 162, p. 2206.)
Recently, it was shown that the doping degree of PANI can exceed 50%. (J. Gaubicher et al., “Lithium-Doped Pernigraniline-Based Materials”, U.S. Pat. No. 10,651,473 (2020).) This was made possible due to exchange of hydrogen atoms connected with nitrogen in the structure of PANI by lithium atoms, although the authors stressed the necessity of anions to support charge/discharge cycling.
A composite of PANI and a graphene-based material (GBM) exhibited considerably greater specific capacity of about 250 mAh/g. The GBM in the PANI/GBM composite is primarily a mixture of multi-, few-, and mono-layered graphene particles. (O. Posudiievskyi, International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/IB2018/055009.) However, it should be noted that no evidence of practical, prolonged charge/discharge cycling of PANI was evidenced. (See, e.g., J. Gaubicher et al., “Lithium-Doped Pernigraniline-Based Materials”, U.S. Pat. No. 10,651,473 (2020): O. Posudiievskyi, ibid.) A consideration and discussion of the electrolyte quantity necessary for practical use of the PANI-based materials in the cathodes of batteries-lithium batteries in particular—was lacking based on the increased PANI doping level.
On the other hand, the practice of doping PANI with anions during redox transitions at high potentials has been reported. (P. Jiménez et al., “Lithium n-Doped Polyaniline as a High-Performance Electroactive Material for Rechargeable Batteries”, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed., 2017, Vol. 56, 1553: M. Charlton et al., “Polyaniline Electrode Activation in Li Cells”, J. Electrochem. Soc., 2020. Vol. 167, 080501.)
The minimal quantity of anions necessary for 50% doping of PANI has been reported to be equal to one anion per two C6H4N polymer units: 1 mole of anions per about 182 g of the polymer; or 1 L of a commonly used liquid organic electrolyte with 1M lithium salt concentration per about 182 g of the polymer. (Y. Yamada et al., “Advances and issues in developing salt concentrated battery electrolytes”, Nat. Energy, 2019, Vol. 4, p. 269.)
Accordingly, about 5.5 mL of the electrolyte is required per ˜1 g of the polymer in the cathode mass, or about 5.5 g of the electrolyte per 147 mAh of charge, the theoretical charge storage limit of the polymer. The electrolyte weight to cathode capacity ratio (E/C) in such a system is equal to 37.4 g/(Ah). Such a high E/C value suggests a severe limitation, if not a practical impossibility for PANI-based cathodes in high-performance metal-ion batteries. Indeed, practical lithium-ion batteries exhibit an E/C ratio below 3 g/(Ah). (X. Ren et al., “Enabling High-Voltage Lithium-Metal Batteries under Practical Conditions”, Joule, 2019. Vol. 3, p. 1662: Sh. Chen et al., “Critical Parameters for Evaluating Coin Cells and Pouch Cells of Rechargeable Li-Metal Batteries”, Joule, 2019, Vol. 3, p. 1094; J. Liu et al., “Pathways for practical high-energy long-cycling lithium metal batteries”, Nat. Energy, 2019, Vol. 4, p. 180; H. Li., “Practical Evaluation of Li-Ion Batteries”, Joule, 2019, Vol. 3, p. 911.)
It is theorized that an even higher E/C value (compared with 37.4 g/(Ah) for 50% doped PANI) is possible for charge/discharge cycling of PANI doped with anions, resulting in a higher specific capacity of PANI in a cathode mass of a battery.
In general, systems and methods for grounding a new mechanism of PANI charge/discharge processes, free from anion participation, and furthermore based on reversible insertion/extraction of cations is disclosed. The disclosed systems and methods solve the problem of the large quantity of electrolyte previously thought necessary for the functioning of PANI, all the while providing prolonged, reversible charge/discharge cycling of PANI suitable for practical rechargeable batteries.
The disclosed mechanisms suggest the possibility of rocking chair-like functioning of a battery utilizing PANI as the cathode active component. A practical consequence of a constant electrolyte concentration is that the metal-ion conductivity between the electrodes of the batteries is maximized due to the electrode pores being filled, leading to highly efficient metal-ion transport. A minimal quantity of electrolyte sufficient to fill the cathode pores provides an E/C ratio below 3 g/(Ah), as in the best commercial lithium-ion batteries.
In a first general aspect, a battery is disclosed. The battery includes a first electrode acting as an anode and a second electrode acting as a cathode. The second electrode includes at least one polymer binder, a conductive carbon-based material, and an active material. The battery further includes an insulative separator material disposed between the first and second electrode that supports transport of lithium ions, and an electrolyte including at least one aprotic solvent, and at least one lithium salt that is soluble in the at least one aprotic solvent.
In one embodiment, the battery includes a quantity of the electrolyte corresponding to a ratio of the electrolyte weight to the cathode capacity. In a first example, the ratio is less than 10 g/(Ah): in a second example, the ratio is less than 3 g/(Ah).
In one embodiment, the first electrode includes lithium metal, lithium alloy, graphite, a material including graphene, silicon or a material comprised of SiOx. In one embodiment, the active material includes a composite of polyaniline and a graphene-based material.
In one embodiment, the electrolyte is a liquid and non-aqueous. In an alternative embodiment, the electrolyte is a solid that includes a lithium ion organic polymer or a lithium ion conducting inorganic compound.
In a second general aspect, a method of fabricating a battery is disclosed. The method includes providing a first electrode acting as an anode and providing a second electrode acting as a cathode, wherein the second electrode includes at least one polymer binder, a conductive carbon-based material and an active material. The method includes disposing an insulative separator material that supports transport of lithium ions between the first and the second electrode. The method further includes providing an electrolyte between the first and second electrode, the electrolyte including at least one aprotic solvent and at least one lithium salt that is soluble in the at least one aprotic solvent.
In one embodiment of the method, the active material includes a composite of polyaniline and a graphene-based material. In a related embodiment, the composite of polyaniline and a graphene-based material is prepared according to a process including milling a mixture of polyaniline in the state of emeraldine base and a graphene-based material according to a relative weight ratio. In one embodiment, the relative weight ratio is between about 75:25 polyaniline to graphene-based material to about 99:1 polyaniline to graphene-based material.
In an embodiment of the method, the milling is performed in a solvent-free environment. In an embodiment of the method, the graphene-based material includes a mixture of multi-, few- and mono-layered graphene particles. The mixture can be prepared by chemical, mechanochemical, electrochemical, sonochemical or thermochemical exfoliation of particles of graphite, graphene oxide, intercalated graphite or expanded graphite.
In one embodiment of the method, the method further includes an optional step of isolating and purifying the polyaniline/graphene-based composite from any other materials present during the milling process.
In one embodiment of the method, the first electrode is formed by a deposition step that includes depositing a cathode mass onto a current collector, wherein the cathode mass includes a binder, a conductive additive, and the active material. In a related embodiment, the binder is water soluble. In a further related embodiment, the binder is polyethylene oxide, styrene-butadiene rubber, alginate, polyacrylic acid, chitosan and water-soluble derivatives thereof, resin, amphiphilic, and gum latexes, polyolefin grafted acrylic acid copolymer, carboxymethylcellulose, β-cyclodextrin, or a combination thereof.
In one embodiment of the method, the deposition step includes preparing a slurry of the cathode mass by mixing the binder, the conductive additive and the active material with water. In a related embodiment, the slurry is free of N-methyl pyrrolidone.
Unless otherwise defined, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. Although methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of any described embodiment, suitable methods and materials are described below. In addition, the materials, methods, and examples are illustrative only and not intended to be limiting. In case of conflict with terms used in the art, the present specification, including definitions, will control.
The foregoing summary is illustrative only and is not intended to be in any way limiting. In addition to the illustrative aspects, embodiments, and features described above, further aspects, embodiments, and features will become apparent by reference to the drawings and the following detailed description and claims.
The present embodiments are illustrated by way of the figures of the accompanying drawings, which may not necessarily be to scale, in which like references indicate similar elements, and in which:
In this embodiment, electrolyte layer 3 is a porous polymer membrane. The pores are filled with 1) a liquid electrolyte that is a solution of a lithium salt, or several lithium salts in an organic aprotic solvent or a mixture of different aprotic solvents, and preferably additives serving to improve the electrode-electrolyte interfaces; 2) an organic polymer film having conductivity of lithium ions at optimal concentration of a corresponding lithium salt (e.g., for polyethylene oxide the optimal ratio of oxygen to lithium is about 8:1); 3) a lithiated NAFION or analogous film that possesses intrinsic lithium ion conductivity; 4) a lithium ion conducting, solid inorganic electrolyte; or 5) a combination of any or all of the preceding items 1-5.
In this embodiment, cathode layer 4 contains a PANI and a GBM-based composite as the active component which is disclosed in International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/IB2018/055009, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. In this embodiment, cathode layer 4 is composed of a solvent-free, mechanochemically prepared PANI/GBM composite containing emeraldine base PANI and a mixture of multi-, few-, and mono-layered graphene particles as the GMB. A mechanochemical procedure for preparation of PANI/GBM is analogous in essence to the mechanochemical procedure for preparation of hybrid nanocomposites disclosed in O. Posudievsky et al . . . “Hybrid Two- and Three-Component Host-Guest Nanocomposites and Method for Manufacturing the Same”, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/623,000, to GM Global Technology Operations, Inc., which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Rechargeable battery 1 was shown to exhibit rocking-chair functionality (e.g., cation insertion/extraction induced charge/discharge cycling) utilizing: a lithium metal anode: an electrolyte layer composed of a lithiated NAFION (LIFION) membrane free from any soluble lithium salts such as LiBF4, LiClO4, LiPF6, etc.; and a PANI-based cathode. The rechargeable battery 1 was assembled in a CR 2016 cell in an argon-filled MBRAUN glove box with an oxygen and water content below 0.1 ppm.
In this example, the lithium anode was produced from a Li foil. The LIFION membrane was prepared from a commercial NAFION membrane according to known methods. (J. Gao et al., “Lithiated Nafion as polymer electrolyte for solid-state lithium sulfur batteries using carbon-sulfur composite cathode”, J. Power Sources, 2018, Vol. 382, P. 179.) Before assembling the CR 2016 cell, the LIFION membrane was soaked in anhydrous propylene carbonate.
Investigating the properties of rechargeable battery 1, several cells were fabricated. A first cell, “Cell I”, included a cathode mass formed from mechanochemically prepared PANI and a GBM based composite, with a PANI to GBM weight ratio equal to about 9:1 according to the procedures set forth in International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/IB2018/055009, a polymer binder and a carbon black additive. The weight ratio of the cathode mass components was 85:10:5 (PANI/GBM: polymer binder: carbon black additive). In this example, the polymer binder was a mixture of polyolefin grafted acrylic acid copolymer (3 wt. % aqueous solution) and carboxymethylcellulose (2.5 wt. % aqueous solution) in a 1:3 ratio. In this example, double-distilled water was used to prepare a cathode mass slurry which was deposited on a cathode current collector using a doctor blade. The cathode mass was dried at 60° C. in air and subsequently under vacuum at 80° C. The cathode mass loading was performed so as to ensure a unilateral areal capacity of 3 mAh/cm2.
A second cell, “Cell II” was prepared in an analogous way as Cell I, except that pure emeraldine base PANI was used instead of a composite PANI/GBM.
A third and fourth cell (Cell III and Cell IV, respectively) were assembled to investigate the possibility of achieving the maximum specific capacity of PANI and the prolonged operation of a practical lithium metal battery.
In these examples, Cell III samples were assembled in an analogous procedure as for Cell I samples, except that the electrolyte layer was produced from Celgard 2400 polypropylene membrane (Celgard, LLC, Charlotte, North Carolina, United States) and a 1M solution of LiClO4 in propylene carbonate, as opposed to the LIFION membrane and pure propylene carbonate utilized in Cell I.
Cell IV samples were assembled in an analogous procedure as for Cell III, except that polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) binder and N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) was used as the solvent during preparation of the slurry for deposition of the PANI/GBM based cathode mass on the cathode current collector.
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At the same time, solutions of water-soluble binders such as polyacrylic acid and carboxymethylcellulose dissolved in water can be used for preparation of the cathode mass slurry to provide greater specific capacity of PANI, prolonged cycling of lithium metal batteries based thereon, simultaneously ensure lower cost for cathode mass preparation and processing, and reduce usage of organic solvents that pose ecological and environmental hazards associated with battery manufacture.
A number of illustrative embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the various embodiments presented herein. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims priority to and the benefit under 35 USC § 119 (e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/312,015 entitled “POLY ANILINE BASED BATTERIES WITH LEAN ELECTROLYTE”, which was filed in the United States Patent and Trademark Office on Feb. 20, 2022, the contents of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety as if fully set forth herein.
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US2023/013401 | 2/19/2023 | WO |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 63312015 | Feb 2022 | US |