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Lithium Salts for Advanced Lithium Batteries: Li-metal, Li-O2, and Li-S...

by Reza Younesi, Gabriel M Veith, Patrik Johansson, Kristina Edstrom, Tejs Vegge
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Energy & Environmental Science
Publication Date
Page Numbers
1905 to 1922
Volume
8
Issue
7

Presently lithium hexafluorophosphate (LiPF6) is the dominant Li-salt used in commercial rechargeable lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) based on a graphite anode and a 3-4 V cathode material. While LiPF6 is not the ideal Li-salt for every important electrolyte property, it has a uniquely suitable combination of properties (temperature range, passivation, conductivity, etc.) rendering it the overall best Li-salt for LIBs. However, this may not necessarily be true for other types of Li-based batteries. Indeed, next generation batteries, for example lithium-metal (Li-metal), lithium-oxygen (Li-O2), and lithium sulphur (Li-S), require a re-evaluation of Li-salts due to the different electrochemical and chemical reactions and conditions within such cells. This review explores the critical role Li-salts play in ensuring in these batteries viability.