Author
Listed:
- Guorui Cai
(University of California)
- Yijie Yin
(University of California)
- Dawei Xia
(University of California)
- Amanda A. Chen
(University of California
University of California)
- John Holoubek
(University of California)
- Jonathan Scharf
(University of California)
- Yangyuchen Yang
(University of California)
- Ki Hwan Koh
(University of California)
- Mingqian Li
(University of California)
- Daniel M. Davies
(University of California)
- Matthew Mayer
(University of California)
- Tae Hee Han
(Hanyang University)
- Ying Shirley Meng
(University of California
University of California
University of California)
- Tod A. Pascal
(University of California
University of California
University of California
University of California)
- Zheng Chen
(University of California
University of California
University of California
University of California)
Abstract
Confining molecules in the nanoscale environment can lead to dramatic changes of their physical and chemical properties, which opens possibilities for new applications. There is a growing interest in liquefied gas electrolytes for electrochemical devices operating at low temperatures due to their low melting point. However, their high vapor pressure still poses potential safety concerns for practical usages. Herein, we report facile capillary condensation of gas electrolyte by strong confinement in sub-nanometer pores of metal-organic framework (MOF). By designing MOF-polymer membranes (MPMs) that present dense and continuous micropore (~0.8 nm) networks, we show significant uptake of hydrofluorocarbon molecules in MOF pores at pressure lower than the bulk counterpart. This unique property enables lithium/fluorinated graphite batteries with MPM-based electrolytes to deliver a significantly higher capacity than those with commercial separator membranes (~500 mAh g−1 vs.
Suggested Citation
Guorui Cai & Yijie Yin & Dawei Xia & Amanda A. Chen & John Holoubek & Jonathan Scharf & Yangyuchen Yang & Ki Hwan Koh & Mingqian Li & Daniel M. Davies & Matthew Mayer & Tae Hee Han & Ying Shirley Meng, 2021.
"Sub-nanometer confinement enables facile condensation of gas electrolyte for low-temperature batteries,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-11, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:12:y:2021:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-021-23603-0
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23603-0
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