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Highly Elastic Polyrotaxane Binders for Mechanically Stable Lithium Hosts in Lithium-Metal Batteries

Cited 63 time in Web of Science Cited 66 time in Scopus
Authors

Yoo, Dong-Joo; Elabd, Ahmed; Choi, Sunghun; Cho, Yunshik; Kim, Joemin; Lee, Seung Jong; Choi, Seung Ho; Kwon, Tae-woo; Char, Kookheon; Kim, Ki Jae; Coskun, Ali; Choi, Jang Wook

Issue Date
2019-07
Publisher
WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
Citation
Advanced Materials, Vol.31 No.29, p. 1901645
Abstract
Despite their unparalleled theoretical capacity, lithium-metal anodes suffer from well-known indiscriminate dendrite growth and parasitic surface reactions. Conductive scaffolds with lithium uptake capacity are recently highlighted as promising lithium hosts, and carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are an ideal candidate for this purpose because of their capability of percolating a conductive network. However, CNT networks are prone to rupture easily due to a large tensile stress generated during lithium uptake-release cycles. Herein, CNT networks integrated with a polyrotaxane-incorporated poly(acrylic acid) (PRPAA) binder via supramolecular interactions are reported, in which the ring-sliding motion of the polyrotaxanes endows extraordinary stretchability and elasticity to the entire binder network. In comparison to a control sample with inelastic binder (i.e., poly(vinyl alcohol)), the CNT network with PRPAA binder can endure a large stress during repeated lithium uptake-release cycles, thereby enhancing the mechanical integrity of the corresponding electrode over battery cycling. As a result, the PRPAA-incorporated CNT network exhibits substantially improved cyclability in lithium-copper asymmetric cells and full cells paired with olivine-LiFePO4, indicating that high elasticity enabled by mechanically interlocked molecules such as polyrotaxanes can be a useful concept in advancing lithium-metal batteries.
ISSN
0935-9648
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/164678
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.201901645
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  • College of Engineering
  • School of Chemical and Biological Engineering
Research Area Physics, Materials Science

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