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Cited 15 time in webofscience Cited 16 time in scopus
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Triethanolamine borate as a surface stabilizing bifunctional additive for Ni-rich layered oxide cathodeopen access

Authors
Lim, Sang HooJung, KwangeunLee, Keon-JoonMun, JunyoungHan, Young-KyuYim, Taeeun
Issue Date
Feb-2021
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
additive; amine; borate; cathode; lithium-ion batteries; surface stability
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH, v.45, no.2, pp 2138 - 2147
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENERGY RESEARCH
Volume
45
Number
2
Start Page
2138
End Page
2147
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/5386
DOI
10.1002/er.5907
ISSN
0363-907X
1099-114X
Abstract
Ni-rich cathode materials have been receiving substantial highlight because of its large specific capacity, however, they suffer from inferior cycling results owing to occurring undesired reactions in the cell. Herein, triethanolamine borate (TEAB), containing borate and ethanolamine groups, is proposed as a functional additive because it spontaneously suppresses electrolyte decomposition while inhibiting Ni dissolution in Ni-rich cathodes. The electrochemical oxidation of TEAB first generates borate-based cathode-electrolyte interphases for the Ni-rich cathode, which effectively suppress the electrolyte decomposition. A cell controlled with TEAB showed a greatly decreased internal pressure, which improved the safety performance of the cell. Notably, even the inclusion of 0.1% TEAB in the cell markedly increased the cycling performance from 32.0% to 63.2%. Cells cycled with TEAB showed stable retention rate after 100 cycles at high temperature. Results of high-temperature storage of the cells confirmed improvements as changes in the open-circuit potentials, thickness of the cell, and the recovery rate for specific capacity. TEAB is also efficient for suppressing Ni dissolution because TEAB selectively scavenges fluoride species by a chemical scavenging reaction. The cell evaluated with TEAB-containing electrolyte exhibited a releasing 140.3 ppm of dissolved Ni, whereas the cell evaluated with bare electrolyte released 643.6 ppm.
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