Practical Lithium Air Batteries

Lead Research Organisation: Queen's University Belfast
Department Name: Sch of Chemistry and Chemical Eng

Abstract

This project is centred around the development of a practical lithium air battery single cell with improved performance. The
project consortium includes Queens University Belfast and Liverpool University as academic partners and Johnson
Matthey, Axeon, JLR and Air Products as the industrial partners.
The instability of existing electrolytes to superoxides is a major barrier to achieving good cycle life in current laboratory
scale Li-air cells, due to capacity fade as a result of the formation of irreversible species from solvent decomposition that
occurs if current Lithium ion battery organic electrolytes are used. Therefore, significant effort will focus on synthesising
novel electrolytes capable of surviving operation in Li-air batteries, where a large operational voltage window and immunity
to degradation from superoxide attack are key features, combined with practical levels of oxygen solubility and ionic
conductivity. Novel ionic liquid electrolytes and blends will be synthesised using the expertise at QUB and also drawing on
empirical and modelling results already available in the literature, relating to solvent stability in the presence of superoxide.
Novel anode and cathode materials and catalysts will be prepared and tested (JM) in combination with improved
electrolytes synthesised in the project (JM). Emphasis will also be placed on optimising cathode structures for the novel
electrolytes to achieve improved capacity, current density and cycle life (JM, Axeon). Understanding the cathode reactions
oxygen reduction during discharge and oxygen evolution during charge with new electrolytes via iR and Raman
spectroelectrochemistry techniques will be undertaken (Liverpool University) and the behaviour at the anode interface in
the novel electrolytes will also be explored. The wide variety of analytical techniques available via the different project
partners including XPS, ATR, electron microscopy and electrochemical measurements will be applied within the project.
Cell testing studies will investigating the effects of various parameters, pressure, temperature , charge rate, the effect of
carbon dioxide and water impurities in inlet air and possible inlet air clean up strategies also be considered (JM, Axeon, Air
Products, JLR).
The key outputs from the project will be an optimised single cell configuration with the best electrolyte, electrode material
and electrode structure combination, accompanied by understanding of the electrochemistry and the effect of cathode
structure and test parameters on battery performance and cyclability. These data contribute toward establishing the
feasibility of lithium air battery technology and will lay a firm foundation for future development of larger scale
demonstration systems .

Planned Impact

The successful development of a novel electrolyte for Lithium air batteries and associated understanding gained within this
project will be a significant enabler for future industrial research, product development and ultimately the viability of lithium
air battery systems for larger scale use. This will benefit the project partners, their associates and stakeholders in the wider
battery supply chain growing within the UK.
This project is targeted at developing energy materials for advanced battery systems with energy densities > 400Wh/kg
exceeding Li-ion technology and aimed at automotive applications. Predictions (by LMC Automotive) imply the number of
vehicles that contain an element of electrification within their drive train is estimated to increase from 1.5% of the market to
8% by the end of the decade. Further expansion is prohibited by the cost and the performance of the battery packs. Lithium
air batteries have a substantially higher theoretical energy density than Lithium ion, such that a 3-5 times battery capacity
benefit in practical systems is still predicted for Lithium air, even when factors such as additional weight of cell components batteries and supercapacitors and overlap of air cathode, air purification and system aspects with other metal air battery
technologies such as Zn-air.
and single cell to pack efficiency losses are taken into account. Thus such batteries might provide greater range/lower cost
in automotive systems. However, electrolyte instability and associated poor cyclability of these batteries remains a
significant barrier to success. Improvements to electrode materials/structure and a full understanding of the requirements
for a Lithium air battery system (air purification and on paper system feasibility investigation) will also be generated, leading
to associated scale up work within the UK in the future, for materials, electrodes, battery packs and ultimately systems.
Information on the novel materials, cell testing and system feasibility generated will be disseminated via conferences,
publications as appropriate. The project also provides training via PhD projects and application of existing expertise in new
areas via the academic and industrial project work. Research is increasing worldwide on metal air and advanced battery
materials topics, especially in Asia and the USA and this project will accelerate the progress of research on these topics in
the UK.
Results from the project also overlap into other technology areas for example, the use of high stability electrolytes in Li-ion

Publications

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Coadou E (2016) Synthesis and Thermophysical Properties of Ether-Functionalized Sulfonium Ionic Liquids as Potential Electrolytes for Electrochemical Applications. in Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry

 
Description Development of safer electrolytes for energy storage systems including lithium-air batteries.

A patent will be submitted soon on the formulation of novel electrolytes for lithium-air batteries (Johnson Matthey Technology Centre + QUB).

Several publications have been also submitted:

1) Submission of paper to PCCP journal with Professor Compton's group; TITLE = Voltammetric measurements of oxygen solubility and diffusivity in a range of bis{(trifluoromethyl)sulfonyl}imide anion based ionic liquids for lithium-air batteries;
Initial submission - 20/11/15
Revised submission; 15/02/16

2) Submission of invited paper to Journal of Power Sources with Andrea Balducci's group (HUI); TITLE = An ether-functionalised cyclic sulfonium based ionic liquid as an electrolyte for electrochemical double layer capacitors.
Submission date= 29/01/16

3) Future plan:

229th ECS meeting, San Diego. Abstract accepted for Oral presentation of work. Title = Electrochemical Investigations into Blended Electrolytes Containing Ionic Liquids and a Glyme Solvent for Li-O2 Batteries. (29/05/16 - 04/06/16)

Attending SIRBATT Orlando conference; Controlling Lithium Battery Interfaces (27/05/16).

Proposed paper submissions:
• Binary mixtures of 1-butyl-1-methylpyrroldinium bis{(trifluoromethyl)sulfonyl}imide and aliphatic nitrile solvents for EDLC electrolytes. (2 part submission to PCCP with Andrea Balducci's group at HUI)
• Synthesis and thermophyscial properties of ethereal functionalised cyclic alkylammonium-based ionic liquids for electrochemical applications. (QUB submission to J. Chem. Eng. Data.)
Exploitation Route Novel electrolytes and ionic liquids have been made, which are currently used for other applications including supercapacitors. QUB was invited to participate to an ITN: ELYTECAPX (supercapacitors) submitted last January.
Sectors Chemicals,Education,Energy

 
Description Johnson Matthey Technology Centre 
Organisation Johnson Matthey
Department Johnson Matthey Technology Centre
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Development of safer electrolytes for batteries.
Collaborator Contribution Utilization of selected electrolytes in batteries.
Impact 1) Several papers have been published and 2 were recently submitted. 2) A patent is pending. 3) Secondments: Visit 1; 28/04/14 - 02/05/14 (Establishing experimental methodology and consistency between research partners at JMTC and Liv) Visit 2; 26/10/15 - 06/11/15: 2 weeks of electrode/electrolyte preparation and testing under Li-air cell cycling experiments. Visit 3; 03/10/16 - 07/10/16: 1 week of electrode/electrolyte preparation and testing under Li-air cell cycling experiments.
Start Year 2013
 
Description Karlsruhe Institute of Technology 
Organisation Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Department Helmholtz Institute Ulm (HUI)
Country Germany 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Design of novel ionic liquids for supercapacitors.
Collaborator Contribution Utilization of novel ionic liquids for supercapacitors.
Impact 5 papers have been submitted. 1 H2020 ITN project has been submitted last January with this group.
Start Year 2013
 
Description Oxford - Professor Compton's group 
Organisation University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Development of novel electrolytes for batteries.
Collaborator Contribution Training on voltammetric measurements of oxygen solubility and diffusivity in electrolytes.
Impact Submission of paper to PCCP journal with Professor Compton's group; TITLE = Voltammetric measurements of oxygen solubility and diffusivity in a range of bis{(trifluoromethyl)sulfonyl}imide anion based ionic liquids for lithium-air batteries; Initial submission - 20/11/15 Revised submission; 15/02/16
Start Year 2014