4.7 Article

Effect of SiO2 Nanoparticles on the Performance of PVdF-HFP/Ionic Liquid Separator for Lithium-Ion Batteries

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano8110926

Keywords

lithium-ion battery; ionic-liquid-based separator; hot-pressing; inorganic nanoparticle; nanocomposite; fractal cluster

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [200020_ 165917]

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Safety concerns related to the use of potentially explosive, liquid organic electrolytes in commercial high-power lithium-ion batteries are constantly rising. One promising alternative is to use thermally stable ionic liquids (ILs) as conductive media, which are however, limited by low ionic conductivity at room temperature. This can be improved by adding fillers, such as silica or alumina nanoparticles (NPs), in the polymer matrix that hosts the IL. To maximize the effect of such NPs, they have to be uniformly dispersed in the matrix while keeping their size as small as possible. In this work, starting from a water dispersion of silica NPs, we present a novel method to incorporate silica NPs at the nanoscale level (<200 nm) into PVdF-HFP polymer clusters, which are then blended with the IL solution and hot-pressed to form separators suitable for battery applications. The effect of different amounts of silica in the polymer matrix on the ionic conductivity and cyclability of the separator is investigated. A membrane containing 10 wt.% of silica (with respect to the polymer) was shown to maximize the performance of the separator, with a room temperature ionic conductivity of of 1.22 mS cm(-1). The assembled half-coin cell with LiFePO4 and Li as the cathode and the anode exhibited a capacity retention of more than 80% at a current density of 2C and 60 degrees C.

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