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Boosting a practical lithium carbon dioxide battery through a decoupled electrolyte

Author

Listed:
  • Fangli Zhang

    (The University of Adelaide, School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials)

  • Jodie A. Yuwono

    (The University of Adelaide, School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials)

  • Ruizhi Zhang

    (The University of Adelaide, School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials)

  • Lars Thomsen

    (Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organization, Australian Synchrotron)

  • Shuixin Xia

    (The University of Adelaide, School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials
    University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, School of Materials and Chemistry)

  • Wenchao Zhang

    (Central South University, School of Metallurgy and Environment)

  • Liyuan Chai

    (Central South University, School of Metallurgy and Environment)

  • Zaiping Guo

    (The University of Adelaide, School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials
    City University of Hong Kong, Department of Materials Science and Engineering)

Abstract

Highly conductive electrolytes and stable electrolyte|electrode interfaces are desired for next-generation batteries. Constructing solid-electrolyte interphases on electrodes is a prevailing strategy for enhancing interfacial stability but fails to prevent inevitable breakdown and reformation of interphases during prolonged cycling. Herein, a decoupled electrolyte is designed by introducing a co-solvent (tetraethylene glycol dimethyl ether) with high stability and high positive electrostatic potential values into highly conductive dimethylformamide-based electrolytes, which suffer from electrolyte|positive electrode instability. The preferential adsorption of cations solvated with co-solvents on the positive electrode during discharge induces the formation of a co-solvent-rich localized environment, inhibiting side reactions and contributing to long cyclability. Meanwhile, dimethylformamide in the bulk electrolyte helps to maintain high ionic conductivity, thus improving kinetics. Notably, lithium-carbon dioxide cells with this decoupled electrolyte demonstrate a significantly improved cycle life of ~ 2600 hours and a low overpotential of ~ 1 V, even with a metal-free commercial reduced graphene oxide catalyst. Our work provides an alternative strategy to solid-electrolyte interphase construction for stabilizing electrolyte|electrode interface and unlocks the potential of previously underexplored solvents in batteries.

Suggested Citation

  • Fangli Zhang & Jodie A. Yuwono & Ruizhi Zhang & Lars Thomsen & Shuixin Xia & Wenchao Zhang & Liyuan Chai & Zaiping Guo, 2025. "Boosting a practical lithium carbon dioxide battery through a decoupled electrolyte," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-12, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-64369-z
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-64369-z
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