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Evaluation of anticancer activity in vitro and in vivo of iridium(iii) polypyridyl complexes
TYPE Review
PUBLISHED 12 September 2023
DOI 10.3389/fchem.2023.1253959
OPEN ACCESS
EDITED BY
Gioele Pagot,
University of Padua, Italy
REVIEWED BY
Stephen Percival,
Sandia National Laboratories (DOE),
United States
Hongcai Gao,
Beijing Institute of Technology, China
Rachel Carter,
Naval Research Laboratory, United States
Leo Small,
Sandia National Laboratories (DOE),
United States
*CORRESPONDENCE
Huaiyou Wang,
why@isl.ac.cn
Min Wang,
wangmin@isl.ac.cn
RECEIVED 06 July 2023
ACCEPTED 23 August 2023
PUBLISHED 12 September 2023
CITATION
Zhang J, Li J, Wang H and Wang M (2023),
Research progress of organic liquid
electrolyte for sodium ion battery.
Front. Chem. 11:1253959.
doi: 10.3389/fchem.2023.1253959
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© 2023 Zhang, Li, Wang and Wang. This is
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which does not comply with these terms.
Research progress of organic
liquid electrolyte for sodium ion
battery
Jia Zhang 1,2,3, Jianwei Li 1,2, Huaiyou Wang 1,2* and Min Wang 1,2*
1
Key Laboratory of Comprehensive and Highly Efficient Utilization of Salt Lake Resources, Qinghai
Institute of Salt Lakes, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xining, China, 2Key Laboratory of Salt Lake
Resources Chemistry of Qinghai Province, Xining, China, 3School of Chemical Sciences, University of
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Electrochemical energy storage technology has attracted widespread attention
due to its low cost and high energy efficiency in recent years. Among the
electrochemical energy storage technologies, sodium ion batteries have been
widely focused due to the advantages of abundant sodium resources, low price
and similar properties to lithium. In the basic structure of sodium ion battery, the
electrolyte determines the electrochemical window and electrochemical
performance of the battery, controls the properties of the electrode/electrolyte
interface, and affects the safety of sodium ion batteries. Organic liquid electrolytes
are widely used because of their low viscosity, high dielectric constant, and
compatibility with common cathodes and anodes. However, there are
problems such as low oxidation potential, high flammability and safety hazards.
Therefore, the development of novel, low-cost, high-performance organic liquid
electrolytes is essential for the commercial application of sodium ion batteries. In
this paper, the basic requirements and main classifications of organic liquid
electrolytes for sodium ion batteries have been introduced. The current
research status of organic liquid electrolytes for sodium ion batteries has been
highlighted, including compatibility with various types of electrodes and
electrochemical properties such as multiplicative performance and cycling
performance of electrode materials in electrolytes. The composition, formation
mechanism and regulation strategies of interfacial films have been explained.
Finally, the development trends of sodium ion battery electrolytes in terms of
compatibility with materials, safety and stable interfacial film formation are pointed
out in the future.
KEYWORDS
sodium ion battery, organic liquid electrolyte, cathode, anode, solid electrolyte
interphase (SEI)
1 Introduction
Fossil fuels are the most widely used energy source in the world, however, its nonrenewable and unsustainable nature makes it increasingly depleted, and the burning of fossil
fuels causes a series of problems such as global warming and atmospheric pollution (Gao
et al., 2020). Therefore, the development of renewable energy is becoming more and more
important. However, the conversion of renewable energy into electrical energy is variable,
intermittent and unpredictable (Cao et al., 2013), so it is necessary to develop energy storage
technology to realize the scale of grid-connected storage of electrical energy and guarantee
the continuous and stable electricity supply to users (Dunn et al., 2011). Electrochemical
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Sodium ion battery is mainly composed of three parts:
cathode, anode and electrolyte. The working principle is
similar to that of lithium-ion battery. During the charging
process, the cathode material loses electrons in the oxidation
reaction and electrons move from the external circuit to the
anode, while sodium ions (Na+) are removed from the cathode
and enter the electrolyte, then migrate through the electrolyte to
the vicinity of the anode and finally embedded in the anode
material; during the discharge process, the anode electrode
material loses electrons in the oxidation reaction and electrons
move through the external circuit to the cathode, while Na + is
removed from the anode material and embedded in the anode
material. In the process of discharge, the anode material loses
electrons through oxidation and electrons move to the cathode
through the external circuit (Pan et al., 2013). As one of the main
components of sodium ion battery, electrolyte has an important
role in conducting ions and participating in the redox reaction of
cathode and anode (ZHU et al., 2016). Electrolyte is the “bridge”
connecting cathode and anode. The performance of the
electrolyte directly affects the performance of sodium ion
batteries. During the charging and discharging process, the
electrolyte itself decomposes or reacts with the electrode
material to form an interface. The interfacial film on the
anode is called the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI), and the
interfacial film on the cathode is called the cathodic electrolyte
interphase (CEI). CEI and SEI largely determine the
electrochemical performance of the battery system (Lin et al.,
2019). At present, sodium ion battery electrolyte system mainly
includes aqueous electrolyte and non-aqueous electrolyte. Nonaqueous electrolyte contains organic liquid electrolyte and solid
electrolyte. The recyclability of aqueous electrolyte is excellent
but its electrochemical window is narrow and the overall energy
density is low (LIU et al., 2018b). Solid electrolytes generally have
higher impedance and polarization, leading to a decrease in
battery capacity. Moreover, the solid electrolyte itself has a
narrow electrochemical window, and the mismatch with highvoltage electrodes will cause side reactions, leading to the
deterioration of battery cycling performance (Hu et al., 2020;
Gao et al., 2021). In a comprehensive comparison, organic liquid
electrolytes have good properties, such as electrochemical
stability within a certain electrochemical window, sufficiently
high ionic conductivity, and good compatibility with various
electrode materials. Therefore, organic liquid electrolytes are the
most promising electrolytes for sodium ion batteries in practical
applications.
This paper summarizes the research progress of organic
liquid electrolytes for sodium ion batteries by discussing the
basic requirements and composition of organic electrolytes for
sodium ion batteries, the current research status of organic
liquid electrolytes, the composition and requirements of the
interface between electrolytes and electrodes and the regulation
strategies. Finally, the performance of organic electrolyte and
the nature of interfacial film are synthesized, and some
suggestions on the future development trend of organic
electrolyte for sodium ion batteries are proposed, in order to
provide some help to the research of sodium ion battery
electrolyte and sodium ion battery energy storage science and
technology.
energy storage technologies have received much attention due to
their high energy efficiency and high power density (Dunn et al.,
2011; Yang et al., 2011). However, few, if any, electrochemical gridscale energy storage technologies, when implemented at systemlevel, are currently “low cost” and “long lifetime”, especially when
compared to standard natural gas peaker plants. Electrochemical
energy storage technologies certainly have the potential to become
“low cost” and “long lifetime” in future. More research is needed to
achieve this goal and make it economically attractive compared to
fossil fuels (Larcher and Tarascon, 2015).
As a mainstream electrochemical energy storage technology,
lithium-ion batteries are widely used in our life by virtue of their
high energy density and long cycle life. Additionally, the
manufacturing scale of lithium-ion batteries continues to
expand, which will inevitably cause huge consumption of
lithium resources and soaring prices (Li et al., 2017). The
element lithium is not abundant and unevenly distributed in
the earth’s crust (Pan et al., 2013), and in China, it is 70% of the
lithium used depends on imports (RONG et al., 2020). In order to
avoid the problem of “neck” due to the shortage of resources, it is
necessary to develop an energy storage technology that is
comparable to lithium-ion batteries. In the periodic table,
sodium and lithium are metal elements in the same group and
posess similar physical and chemical properties. The earth is rich
in sodium, with an elemental content of about 23,000 ppm
(lithium content is only about 17 ppm), making it sixth place
in terms of abundance. Sodium is distributed all over the world,
completely free from resource and geographical constraints.
Therefore, sodium-ion batteries have a greater promise than
lithium-ion batteries. The research of sodium ion battery can
mitigate resource problem of new energy battery development
caused by the shortage of lithium resources. Sodium ion batteries
(SIBs) include sodium-sulfur batteries, sodium-salt batteries
(ZEBRA batteries), sodium-air batteries, organic-based
sodium-ion batteries and aqueous-based sodium-ion batteries.
Among them, sodium-sulfur batteries are based on the
electrochemical reaction of sodium and sulfur to generate
sodium polysulfide, and are characterized by high power and
energy density, temperature stability, and low cost because of the
abundant cost of its raw materials, and have already achieved
large-scale production (Wen et al., 2008). ZEBRA batteries use
common salt and nickel as the raw materials for the electrodes,
and are combined with ceramic electrolyte and molten salt. This
combination provides battery systems with high specific energy
and power. ZEBRA battery technology has been industrialized for
all types of electric cars and hybrid electric buses (Dustmann,
2004). Sodium-air batteries, organic sodium-ion batteries and
aqueous sodium-ion batteries are still in the research phase.
Sodium ion battery also has the advantages of low cost,
excellent fast charging and low temperature performance,
good safety performance, etc. The manufacturing of sodium
ion battery can follow the production process and equipment
of existing lithium ion battery, which is considered as one of the
transformative technologies in the field of large-scale energy
storage, and its industrialization prospect is quite optimistic
and has important economic and strategic significance (Fang
et al., 2018; Lu et al., 2018; ZHOU et al., 2020). Therefore, sodium
ion batteries are called the “rising star” of the energy storage field.
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(EC)] and chain [dimethyl carbonate (DMC), diethyl carbonate
(DEC) and methyl ethyl carbonate (EMC)] carbonates are most
commonly used, and electrolytes of carbonate solvents tend to have
the advantages of high ionic conductivity and good oxidation
resistance (Ponrouch et al., 2012). The relevant physical and
chemical properties of carbonate solvents are shown in Table 1.
The dielectric constant of ether solvents is much lower than that of
cyclic carbonates, but higher than that of chain carbonates. The
resistance to oxidation is relatively poor, and they tend to
decompose at high voltages. However, ether solvents generate
thinner SEI on anode with higher initial Coulomb efficiency, and
ether solvents are more compatible with anode such as metallic
sodium and can co-embed graphite with sodium ions and show
good reversibility, making graphite that cannot be embedded with
sodium in ester solvents can be used as anode in this solvent system
(Dubois et al., 1997). In the actual application process, the use of two
or even a variety of solvent mix is a more common method (Komaba
et al., 2011b), the ratio of different solvents is controlled, and the
advantages of multiple solvents are integrated to maximize the
performance of electrolytes.
FIGURE 1
Main components of sodium ion battery electrolyte (Hu et al.,
2020).
2.2 Sodium salt
Sodium salts are another important component of organic liquid
electrolytes and play a vital role in the performance of electrolytes
(Che et al., 2017). For the selection of sodium salt. Firstly, the
sodium salt should have sufficient solubility and dissociation ability
in the solvent, and the dissociated cations should be free to move
without obstacles to provide sufficient charge carriers. Secondly, the
sodium salt should remain electrochemically stable within a certain
electrochemical window without oxidation or reduction. The
sodium salt and the solvent together determine the redox
potential of the electrolyte, and the salt anion and the solvent are
coupled by electrostatic interaction, which affects the oxidative
stability of the electrolyte. In addition, the sodium salt should
have good chemical stability as well as safety, remaining
chemically inert to the diaphragm, solvent, electrode and
collector fluid. If the sodium salt can effectively promote the
formation of SEI film at the interface between electrode and
electrolyte, it can better enhance the electrochemical performance
of electrolyte, such as cycling stability (Strauss, 1993; Borodin and
Jow, 2010; Ponrouch et al., 2015; Eshetu et al., 2019; Fadel et al.,
2019). The commonly used sodium salts are sodium perchlorate
(NaClO4),
sodium
tetrafluoroborate
(NaBF4),
sodium
hexafluoroborate (NaPF6), sodium trifluoromethanesulfonate
(NaCF3SO3, abbreviated as NaOTf), sodium bis(fluorosulfonyl)
imide [Na(FSO2)2N, abbreviated as NaFSI] and sodium
bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide [Na(CF3SO2)2N, abbreviated
as NaTFSI] (Hu et al., 2020). The advantages and disadvantages
of these sodium salts are shown in Table 2.
Based on the fact that each of the commonly used sodium salts
has its own advantages and disadvantages, which are difficult to
overcome. Hybrid systems combining two or more sodium salts
have also been investigated, and the aim of avoiding disadvantages
is expected to be realized, but the results are not significant.
Therefore, it is necessary to develop new sodium salts (Hu
et al., 2020). Some new salts that have been synthesized and
2 Components and basic requirements
of organic liquid electrolytes
As a bridge connecting cathode and anode, the electrolyte
assumes the role of transporting ions between cathode and anode
and is an important part of the battery, whichplays a vital role in the
performance of the battery in terms of multiplicity, cycle life, safety
and self-discharge. Organic liquid electrolyte is also customarily
called organic electrolyte. Electrolyte is mainly composed of solvent,
solute and additives (Figure 1), which together determine the
properties of electrolyte.
2.1 Solvent
Solvent is one of the important components of organic liquid
electrolytes. Electrolyte solvents need to satisfy the most basic
conditions such as stability, non-toxicity and cheapness. Besides, the
electrolyte solvent should have a wide electrochemical stability window,
sufficient sodium salt solubility, high dielectric constant, low viscosity
and wide liquid range (i.e., low melting point and high boiling point).
The solvent should also maintain electrochemical stability or promote
the formation of a high-quality passivation layer during cell operation.
However, these different and sometimes conflicting requirements for
the same solvent are difficult to be met by a single solvent, and therefore
multiple solvents are often used in combination. The main solvents
currently used in sodium ion batteries are ester solvents and ether
solvents. These two types of organic solvents have provided excellent
performance in battery applications (Fenton, 1973; Armand et al., 2009;
Monti et al., 2014; Hong et al., 2015; Ponrouch et al., 2015; Niu et al.,
2019; Wang et al., 2020).
Ester solvents are a more commonly used class of solvents,
especially cyclic [propylene carbonate (PC) and ethylene carbonate
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TABLE 1 Physical and chemical properties of some commonly used organic solvents (Xu, 2004; Kamath et al., 2014; Vignarooban et al., 2016; Chen et al., 2019;
Wang M. et al., 2022).
Solvents
Density/
g·cm-3
Boiling
point/°C
Melting
point/°C
Viscosity/
10−3 Pa s 25°C
Dielectric
constant/
F m-1 25°C
HOMO/
eV
LUMO/
eV
DMC
1.063
91
4.6
0.59
3.107
−0.2488
−0.0091
DEC
0.969
126
−74.3
0.75
2.805
−0.2426
−0.0036
EC
1.321
248
36.4
2.1
89.78
−0.2585
−0.0177
PC
1.200
242
−48.8
2.53
64.92
−0.2547
−0.0149
EMC
1.006
110
−53.0
0.65
2.95
−0.2557
−0.0062
TABLE 2 Physical and chemical properties, advantages and disadvantages of commonly used sodium salts (Devlin and Herley, 1987; Ponrouch et al., 2012; Bhide
et al., 2014; Evans et al., 2014; Ponrouch et al., 2015; Eshetu et al., 2016; Eshetu et al., 2019; Forsyth et al., 2019; Goktas et al., 2019; Minh Phuong et al., 2019; Hu
et al., 2020; Wang et al., 2020).
Name of sodium
salt
Anion
structure
Molecular
weight/·mol-1
Melting
point/°C
Advantages
NaClO4
122.4
468
Strong oxidation resistance, suitable for high
voltage systems
Explosive in the dry state and difficult to
remove the moisture contained
NaBF4
109.8
384
High thermal stability, good safety, easy to
make aluminum foil passivation
Harder to dissociate in solvents, low
electrical conductivity
NaPF6
167.9
300
High solubility and high conductivity in
different kinds of solvents, easily passivates
aluminum foil
Poor chemical stability, easily
decomposes to NaF and PF5
NaSO3CF3 (NaOTf)
172.1
248
high oxidation resistance and thermal
stability
Easy formation of ion pairs in organic
solvents, low conductivity of electrolyte
Na[(FSO2)2N](NaFSI)
203.3
118
High electrical conductivity, good thermal
stability
Narrow electrochemical window,
aluminum foil corrosion occurring
around 3.8 V
Na[(CF3SO2)2N]
(NaTFSI)
303.1
257
High electrical conductivity, good thermal
and water stability, and oxidation resistance
Severe aluminum-collector corrosion
the function of additives, they are divided into film-forming
additives, flame retardant additives, overcharge protection
additives and other types of additives (Zhang, 2006).
The most studied are film-forming additives, which are usually easily
consumed. During the initial activation cycle they participate and
contribute to the formation of the interface between the electrode
and the electrolyte, leaving a chemical signal only at the interface and
not in the electrolyte itself. The ideal film-forming additives should have
higher Fermi energy (Eg) located in the highest occupied molecular
orbital-lowest unoccupied molecular orbital gap than solvents,
electrolyte salts, etc., so that they preferentially undergo oxidation or
reduction, which in turn improves the film-forming quality and
efficiency of the SEI film and effectively enhances the electrochemical
performance of the cell (Goodenough and Kim, 2010; Zhu et al., 2017;
Niu et al., 2019). The mechanism of action of various additives is shown
in Table 3. Other types of additives including acidity enhancers, impurity
scavengers, viscosity reducers, free radical scavengers, etc., Also have
potential applications in sodium ion batteries (Ponrouch et al., 2015).
reported are sodium difluorooxalate borate (NaODFB), sodium
4,5-dicyano-2-(trifluoromethyl)imidazolate (NaTDI), sodium 4,5dicyano-2-(pentafluoroethyl)imidazolate
(NaPDI),
sodium
bisoxalate borate (NaBOB), sodium bis [salicylato (2-)]-borate
(NaBSB), sodium salicylic benzylic acid borate (NaBDSB),
sodium tetraphenyl borate (NaBPh4), etc.
2.3 Additives
Additives are the third main component of organic liquid
electrolytes. Additives are components that are present in small
amounts (less than 5%) in the electrolyte and are characterized by
high specificity and small dosage. By adding a small amount of
additives, it is possible to make up for the deficiencies of the original
electrolyte and significantly optimize the specific performance of the
battery without increasing the production cost or changing the
production process (Xu, 2014; Wang et al., 2020). According to
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TABLE 3 Mechanism of action of different types of additives.
Additive type
Name
Mechanism of action
References
Film-forming
additives
Vinylidene carbonate (VC)
VC contains unsaturated double bonds that can
be broken above the PC and EC decomposition
potentials, resulting in macromolecular network
polymers that participate in the formation of
SEI films
Hwang et al. (2017b)
Fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC)
The central atom of the FEC has a strong
electron-acquisition ability because of the strong
electron-absorption effect of the halogen atoms.
At high potentials on the anode surface, the
electrons of the central atom can be reduced,
resulting in a stable SEI film
Komaba et al. (2011a); Darwiche et al. (2012);
Qian et al. (2012); Qian et al. (2013); Wang
et al. (2014); Yabuuchi et al. (2014); Jang et al.
(2015); Sadan et al. (2018)
Propylene-1,3-sulfolactone (PST)
In PST and DTD, the central S atoms are more
electronegative than C atoms, resulting in the
preferential formation of stable SEI films
containing S compounds on the anode surface.
These additives improve the high and low
temperature performance of the cells and reduce
the continuous increase of the interfacial
impedance
Che et al. (2018)
Sodium difluoroxalate borate (NaODFB)
NaODFB can form NaF with small particle size
on the electrode surface, which has good filmforming effect
Yan et al. (2019)
Phosphorus containing flame retardant additives
including trimethyl phosphate (TMP), triethyl
phosphate (TEP), triphenyl phosphate (TPP),
tributyl phosphate (TBP), dimethyl methyl
phosphate (DMMP), three (2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)
phosphite (TFEP) and ethoxy (pentafluoro)
cyclotriphosphonitrile (EFPN)etc.
When these flame retardant additives are
heated, P-containing radicals with flame
retardant properties are released, and the
phosphorus-containing radicals then capture
the hydrogen in the organic radical chain
combustion reaction, terminating the chain
reaction and making the combustion of organic
electrolytes difficult
Hu et al. (2020)
Fluorinated flame retardant additives including
methyl nonafluorobutyl ether (MFE),
perfluorinated (2-methyl-3-pentanone) (PFMP)
and 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethyl-2,2,3,3tetrafluoropropyl ether (HFE)etc.
When encountering an open flame, it is
preferred to evaporate and absorb a large
amount of heat from the surrounding area, thus
extinguishing the flame, and has excellent flame
retardancy
Feng et al. (2015b); Zheng et al. (2020)
Biphenyl (BP)
Prevent overcharging events by accepting
additional charge through the redox shuttle
Feng et al. (2015a)
Vinyl sulfate (DTD)
Flame retardant
additives
Overcharge
protection additive
FIGURE 2
Sodium batteries organic liquid electrolyte keywords co-occurrence analysis: (A) network visualization, (B) overlay visualization and (C) density
visualization, produced by vosviewer software.
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FIGURE 3
Compatibility of sodium NaClO4-based electrolytes with different cathode materials: (A) Schematic evolution of CEI film of
Na0.67Ni0.15Fe0.2Mn0.65O2 (N-NFM) cathode in NaClO4-based electrolytes (Wang S. et al., 2021). (B) HR-TEM images of NVP/C electrodes after 50 cycles
with organic electrolyte and organic + IL electrolyte respectively and (C) XPS C1s Peaks for NVP/C cathodes after 50cycles with Organic and Organic + IL
electrolytes (Manohar et al., 2018a). (D) Diagram of the interaction, (E) cycling performance and (F) Coulombic efficiency of Na4Fe3(PO4)2(P2O7)
electrode in NaClO4-based electrolyte with FEC (Lee et al., 2016). (G) Discharge capacities, (H) long-term cycling stability and (I) EIS spectra of Fe-HCF
and Fe-HCF@PPy electrodes in NaClO4-EC/PC electrolyte (Tang et al., 2016).
3 Current status of research on organic
liquid electrolytes
organic liquid electrolytes exhibited suitable reversible capacity, rate
capability, and cycle life. The binary layered oxides P2NaxCo0.7Mn0.3O2 (x ≈ 1) perform well in the electrolyte of
NaClO4 dissolved in PC with FEC, which is easier to coordinate
with the ClO4− on the cathode surface than the PC solvent and
contributes to the formation of the NaF protective layer on the
cathode surface (Cheng et al., 2019). Ternary layered oxides
Na0.67Ni0.15Fe0.2Mn0.65O2 (N-NFM) CEI membranes formed in
NaClO4 based electrolytes in EC/DEC contain more organic
compounds but less inorganic compounds, leading to increased
impedance. In addition, CEI membranes are sensitive to perchlorate,
which has strong oxidizing properties. A small fraction of the CEI
film peels off from the cathode surface, accelerating the dissolution
of transition metal (TM) ions and leading to reactivation of
electrolyte decomposition (Wang S. et al., 2021). The mechanism
of action and subsequent solubilization of TM ions by CEI films is
shown in Figure 3A. Therefore, further optimization of electrolyte
replenishment is required. Polyanionic compounds have a very solid
framework matched to NaClO4 electrolytes, allowing for higher
cyclability and safety, and have been extensively studied by
researchers. For example, Na3V2(PO4)3(NVP) showed high
discharge capacity and coulomb efficiency with good cycling and
rate capability, cycle life in 0.9 M NaClO4 dissolved in triethyl
phosphate (TEP) electrolyte solution (Liu et al., 2019), and 1 M
NaClO4 in PC added with 5 wt% [C3mpyr] [NTf2] IL (Manohar
et al., 2018a). TEP electrolyte has non-flammable and high safety
features. The IL additive makes the passivation layer organic and ILcontaining and with sulfur in the surface film, and the surface film is
more stable (Figures 3B,C). Na2VM(PO4)3 (M = Ga or Al) behaves
differently in an electrolyte of 1 M NaClO4 with EC/PC = 1:1 v/v,
FEC of 5 vol%, which is attributed to the fact that Na3VAl(PO4)3
possesses a larger diffusion bottleneck to transfer more electrons
Sodium ion battery organic liquid electrolytes are classified
according to sodium salts and are mainly divided into sodium
perchlorate (NaClO4)-based organic liquid electrolytes, sodium
hexafluorophosphate (NaPF6)-based organic liquid electrolytes,
sodium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (NaFSI)-based organic liquid
electrolytes, sodium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (NaTFSI)based organic liquid electrolytes, and sodium difluoroxalate
borate (NaODFB)-based organic liquid electrolytes. Figure 2
shows the keyword clustering analysis of the literature related to
organic liquid electrolytes for sodium ion batteries over the years.
The overview of research in this field was presented, including
electrodes, electrolytes, solid electrolyte interfacial films, and
electrochemical properties. In addition to the traditional
electrochemical testing of different electrode materials with
matching electrolytes, the study of solid electrolyte interfacial
membranes and the development of new organic liquid
electrolytes are gradually attracting the attention of researchers in
recent years. The following section will focus on the compatibility of
different types of sodium ion battery electrolytes with each electrode.
3.1 Sodium perchlorate (NaClO4)-based
organic liquid electrolytes
NaClO4-based organic liquid electrolyte is a widely used
electrolyte for sodium ion batteries with good compatibility with
common cathode materials (layered oxides, polyanionic
compounds, and Prussian blue-like compounds). The battery
system consisting of layered oxide and sodium perchlorate-based
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FIGURE 4
Compatibility of sodium NaClO4-based electrolytes with different anode materials: (A) Schematic illustration of the behavior of the HC electrode in
the different ratios NaClO4/TMP electrolytes (Liu X. et al., 2018). (B) Schematic evolution of SEI film of Na2Ti3O7@C with different electrolytes (Wen et al.,
2023). (C) Capacity retention of hollow NP-based γ-Fe2O3 electrodes at different rates (Koo et al., 2013).
(238 mAh g-1 at 20 mA g-1), long-term cycle life up to 1,500 cycles, 84%
capacity retention at 200 mA g-1, and high rate capability (Liu X. et al.,
2018). Graphite-based intercalated anode perform well in electrolytes
with solvent combinations of EC/DEC (Luo et al., 2015), EC/DMC
(Wang S.-W. et al., 2017), and PC (Wang et al., 2013). In addition to
carbon materials, other inserted anodes have been investigated, such as
TiO2, Na2Ti3O7. TiO2 in 1M NaClO4 in EC/PC electrolyte exhibits the
best high-magnification performance of all titanium-based sodium ion
anode materials reported so far (Wu et al., 2014). The SEI film generated
in Na2Ti3O7@C anode material with sodium perchlorate (NaClO4)based EC/DEC electrolyte contains more Na2CO3 and NaF, which is
caused by the continuous decomposition of NaClO4 salt in carbonate
solvent. This makes the SEI film thicker and the interfacial impedance
greater, leading to a decrease in cell cycling performance, this is in
contrast to the NaOTf electrolyte (Figure 4B) (Wen et al., 2023). Metal
oxides/sulfides/phosphides are typical conversion electrodes in SIBs,
which typically suffer from poor conversion reaction reversibility and
shuttle effects. Similar to other electrode materials, stable cycling of
conversion electrodes relies on dense SEIs to provide stability and
suppress losses of high mechanical strength actives. Hollow γ-Fe2O3
nanoparticles in PC electrolytes of NaClO4 showed superior
performance in terms of capacity retention, Coulomb efficiency,
multiplicative performance, and cycle life (Figure 4C) (Koo et al., 2013).
In general, NaClO4-based organic liquid electrolyte has been widely
used as a relatively mature electrolyte for sodium ion batteries. NaClO4
electrolyte has contributed to the improvement of energy density of
sodium ion batteries with its own stability and oxidation resistance
along with some high-voltage cathode materials. However, the
compatibility with some positive and negative electrodes is not very
good, and it will promote the dissolution of transition metal ions as well
as the generation of thick SEI films, which may require a combination of
additives and different solvent combinations to optimize the electrolyte
in the future.
than Na3VGa(PO4)3 and exhibits a higher redox reaction potential
(Wang Q. et al., 2021). Therefore, the V5+/V4+ redox reaction can be
induced by the substitution of smaller-sized low-valent (≤+3)
cations, which improves the utilization efficiency of the V5+/V4+
redox reaction. The Na4Fe3(PO4)2(P2O7) cathode formed a
protective surface film in the EC/PC/DEC (5/3/2, v/v/v)
electrolyte with 0.5 M NaClO4 added with FEC and prevented
undesirable decomposition of the linear carbonate, leading to
excellent cycling performance of the cathode (Figures 3D–F) (Lee
et al., 2016). The discharge capacity, impedance, multiplicity
performance, cycling stability, and capacity retention of Prussian
blue-like cathode materials sodium hexacyanoferric (Fe-HCF)
composites coated with polypyrrole (PPy) were greatly improved
in the EC/PC electrolyte of NaClO4 (Figures 3G–I) (Tang et al.,
2016). The insertion of Na+ in a series of Prussian blue compounds
in organic carbonate electrolytes of NaClO4 was investigated. KFe
[Fe(CN)6] provides the highest reversible capacity at ~3.6 V for both
the high-spin and low-spin Fe3+/Fe2+ couples (Lu et al., 2012; Wang
Q. et al., 2022).
There have also been a number of studies on the compatibility of
sodium perchlorate-based organic liquid electrolytes with anode. The
most commonly used anode materials are intercalation type materials
(e.g., hard carbon). Hard carbon as the anode of sodium ion batteries
showed good compatibility with NaClO4 electrolytes with solvent of EC,
PC, DMC and DEC exhibiting high specific capacity and good capacity
retention. The electrochemical properties of hard carbon in electrolyte
are further enhanced by the action of some additives (e.g., 1-ethyl-3methylimidazolium bis(fluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (EMImFSI)
(Benchakar et al., 2020), N,N-diethyl-N-methoxyethylammonium
bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (DEMETFSI) (Egashira et al.,
2012), FEC (Liu X. et al., 2018; Pan et al., 2018; Rangom et al.,
2019)). For example, The reversibility of sodium insertion became
evident at a volume content of 70% of DEMETFSI (Egashira et al.,
2012). FEC promotes the formation of the initial sodiuming process SEI
and improves the cycle life. By using added FEC and high salt-to-solvent
molar ratio TMP electrolytes, it is possible to achieve both low RSEI and
very small Rct on HC electrodes, thereby simultaneously inhibiting
TMP decomposition and building thin and dense SEI membranes
(Figure 4A). The electrolyte with a 5 vol% FEC ratio of 1:3 NaClO4/
trimethyl phosphate (TMP) exhibited considerable reversible capacity
Frontiers in Chemistry
3.2 Sodium hexafluorophosphate (NaPF6)based organic liquid electrolytes
NaPF6-based organic liquid electrolyte is also one of the
commonly used electrolytes for sodium ion batteries. Studies on
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FIGURE 5
Compatibility of sodium NaPF6-based electrolytes with different cathode materials: (A) Schematic summary on the role of PST and DTD additives in
NFM/HC full cell (Che et al., 2018). (B) Illustration of effects of electrolyte system, (C) rate performance and (D) cycling performance on NVOPF@rGO//
Na2Ti2O5 full cell (Ba et al., 2022). (E) The diagram of SEI layer formation mechanism on the Na3V2(PO4)3 cathode in NaPF6/BMITFSI IL electrolyte (Wu
et al., 2018). (F) Schematic of the CEI on the Na4Co3(PO4)2P2O7 electrode after 1 st Na+ extraction and insertion (Zarrabeitia et al., 2021).
(>4,000 cycles without degradation) (Figures 5C,D). The
electrolyte defines a robust fluorine-rich inorganic-organic
interface, which effectively improves the interface and promotes
ultra-fast charge transfer (Figure 5B) (Ba et al., 2022). The SEI layer
between Na3V2(PO4)3 and NaPF6/1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium bis
(trifluoromethanesulfonyl) imide (BMITFSI) ionic liquid electrolyte
consists of NaOH, Na2SO4, Na2S2O7 and NaF (Figure 5E). This is
the reason for its good electrochemical properties (Wu et al., 2018).
Half-cell tests of Na4Co3(PO4)2P2O7 in an electrolyte solution of EC/
DEC with 1 M NaPF6 showed the formation of a double layer in the
fully Na+ extracted state of charge, with semi-organic-rich material
found in the subsurface region near the electrode and more organic
material in the outermost surface region near the electrolyte. At the
same time, an additional outermost inorganic cover layer consisting
of sodium carbonate and sodium fluorophosphate was formed after
complete Na+ insertion (Figure 5F). Therefore, the
Na4Co3(PO4)2P2O7
cathode
provided
excellent
cycling
performance (Zarrabeitia et al., 2021). The third cathode material
used to match the NaPF6-based electrolyte is a Prussian blue-like
compound. The Prussian blue cathode electrode exhibits enhanced
capacity retention in a volume ratio of 7: 3 of di-(2,2,2 trifluoroethyl)
carbonate (TFEC)/fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC) consisting of
0.9 mol L-1 NaPF6. The electrolyte has excellent flame retardancy
and good compatibility with sodium electrodes. The polycarbonate
formed on the cathode surface plays an important role in the studied
related cathode materials are often paired with NaPF6-based organic
liquid electrolytes for a series of electrochemical tests. First is the
layered oxide cathode material. The layered oxide exhibits excellent
retention and outstanding multiplicative performance, specific
capacity, capacity retention and long-term cycling stability in
NaPF6-based electrolytes. Among them, The CEI film formed by
Na0.67Ni0.15Fe0.2Mn0.65O2 (N-NFM) in NaPF6-based electrolyte is
dense and homogeneous, which effectively inhibits the dissolution of
transition metal ions and provides a low-energy barrier for Na+
transport (Wang S. et al., 2021). The NaNi1/3Fe1/3Mn1/3O2 cathode
material, paired with a hard carbon anode, maintains up to 92.2%
capacity after 1,000 cycles at 1C between 2.0 V and 3.8 V using an
optimized electrolyte of 1 M NaPF6 dissolved in 1:1 (v/v) PC-EMC
+2 wt% FEC, 1 wt% PST, and 1 wt% DTD. The PST and DTD
additives promote the formation of a robust SEI on the anode and
prevent the dissolution of transition metal ions by inducing the
formation of a dense and dense electrolyte (Figure 5A) (Che et al.,
2018). The second type of cathode material that is often adapted to
NaPF6 electrolytes is the polyanionic compound cathode material.
Polyanionic compounds matching NaPF6 ester and ether
electrolytes have been reported. Na3(VOPO4)2F (NVOPF)/rGO
3D sub-microspheres and Na2Ti2O5 nanosheet anode electrode
and NaPF6 diglyme electrolyte, the full cell was further designed
with high initial Coulombic efficiency (90%), excellent multiplicative
performance (40°C) and ultra-stable cycling performance
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FIGURE 6
Compatibility of sodium NaPF6-based electrolytes with different anode materials: (A) Schematic illustration of SEI and pseudo-SEI structures and
chemistry for Na+ storage in HC anodes in NaPF6 based ester and ether electrolytes (Ma et al., 2021). (B) Cycle capacity for HC electrodes using 1 M
NaPF6 in EC:DMC with addition of 1.5% and 3% of FEC or DMCF (Fondard et al., 2020). (C, D) Representation of free FEC and FEC electrolyte additives in
tuning the microstructure of SEI on Na metals during cycling, respectively (Han et al., 2021).
ether, DME), and to a lesser extent, esters. In these electrolytes the
converted electrode materials exhibit high capacity, cycling
performance, multiplicative performance, first turn Coulomb
efficiency, etc. It indicates that the conversion-type electrodes
have high compatibility with ether-based NaPF6 electrolytes.
Non-metallic elemental anode materials [Micron Pb particles
(Darwiche et al., 2016), and Bi electrodes (Wang C. et al., 2017;
Li Y. et al., 2021)] exhibit good electrochemical performance in
NaPF6-based diethylene glycol dimethyl ether electrolytes and good
compatibility with NVP and NVPF cathode materials, and the fullcell test solution exhibited good performance. For the study of
sodium metal electrodes in NaPF6-based electrolytes, EC/DMC is
often chosen as the solvent. When FEC is added, the Na metal
electrode forms a multilayer SEI structure, including an external
NaF-rich amorphous phase and an internal Na3PO4 phase. This
layered structure stabilizes the SEI and prevents further reactions
between the electrolyte and the Na metal. Without FEC, the
carbonate-based electrolyte containing NaPF6 reacts with the
metal electrode to produce an unstable SEI, rich in Na2CO3 and
Na3PO4, which continuously depletes the cell’s sodium reserves
during cycling (Figures 6C,D) (Han et al., 2021). The Na metal
deposition/dissolution efficiency increased with increasing NaDFP
concentration when sodium difluorophosphate NaDFP additive was
added. NaDFP suppressed the overpotential and interfacial
resistance. A high multiplicative capacity and long cycle life of
76.3% capacity retention after 500 cycles were achieved with 1 wt
% NaDFP. The NaDFP-containing electrolyte formed a more stable
SEI layer than the pure electrolyte, thus mitigating further
degradation of the electrolyte (Yang et al., 2021). In specific
glyme (chain ether) electrolytes, the sodium-metal interface
produces a thin, homogeneous inorganic SEI composed primarily
of Na2O and NaF that may not support extensive or extreme cycling
conditions, but the addition of FEC provides a more robust SEI to
facilitate a large number of consistent sodium plating and stripping
cycles (Seh et al., 2015; Sarkar et al., 2023).
electrolyte system by enhancing the ionic conductivity and reducing
the impedance of the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layer (Zeng
et al., 2020).
Researchers often choose NaPF6-based organic liquid
electrolytes for the study of anode materials (intercalation-type,
conversion-type materials, and non-metallic materials). Hard
carbon HC performs well in NaPF6 electrolytes with ester and
ether solvents. Among them, The TEGDME-based NaPF6
electrolyte can exhibit excellent rate capability, capacity retention
and cyclic Coulombic efficiency at the HC anode. This is because the
stable layer-by-layer SEI in the TEGDME-based electrolyte
combined with the solvent layer “pseudo-SEI” on the HC
facilitates high-performance Na+ ion storage in the HC and
extends the cycle life of the HC anode material (Figure 6A) (Ma
et al., 2021). In the EC/DMC electrolyte, the use of 3% FEC
significantly increased the total capacity and capacity retention,
while the use of DMCF additive had a negative impact on
capacity but provided better cycling performance than the
additive-free electrolyte (Figure 6B) (Fondard et al., 2020). The
good performance can be attributed to the SEI composition
consisting mainly of sodium ethylene dicarbonate NaO2COC2H4-OCO2Na (NEDC) and NaF. FEC as an additive promotes
the production of NaF, which enhances the NEDC-rich SEI and
results in a significant increase in capacity retention during cycling.
Graphite-based materials have good reversible capacity and good
cycling performance in NaPF6/diethylene glycol dimethyl ether
(DEGDME) electrolytes (Han et al., 2015; Cabello et al., 2017;
Nacimiento et al., 2019; Li Z. et al., 2021; Zheng et al., 2022).
Transformation-based
electrode
materials
(e.g.,
copper
phosphorothioate (Cu3PS4) (Brehm et al., 2020), dandelionshaped manganese sulfide (DS-MnS) (Duong Tung et al., 2018),
tin phosphide (Sn4P3/C) electrodes (Luis Gomez-Camer et al.,
2019), TiS2 (Tao et al., 2018), etc.) are also often studied
matching NaPF6-based organic liquid electrolytes. The choice of
solvent is often ether-based solvents (diethylene glycol dimethyl
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FIGURE 7
Compatibility of sodium NaFSI-based electrolytes with different cathode materials: (A) Long-cycling performance of hard-carbon||NaNMC full cells
in two electrolytes (Jin et al., 2022). (B) Organic and hybrid electrolyte compositions, (C) cycling performance and Coulombic efficiency of NVP@C with
organic and hybrid electrolytes at 0.5C and (D) HR-TEM images of NVP@C electrodes after cycling with the organic and hybrid-2 electrolyte, respectively
(Manohar et al., 2018b).
2018b; Zheng et al., 2018; Li et al., 2022). Among them, the ionic
liquid can promote the formation of a stable and thin SEI layer on
the surface, which improves the discharge capacity and cycling
performance of NVP@C cathode materials (Figures 7C,D)
(Manohar et al., 2018b).
The anode materials matched to NaFSI electrolyte mainly
include intercalation type materials, alloy type materials,
conversion type materials and Na metal electrodes. The NaFSI
electrolytes suitable for the study of intercalation-type materials
include ester electrolytes, ether electrolytes, and ionic liquid
electrolytes. Among them, in 3 mol dm-3 NaFSI/PC + EC
electrolyte, an organic-inorganic equilibrium SEI (mainly
composed of (CH2)n and NaF) was formed on the surface of the
hard carbon electrode. This SEI not only enables easy charge transfer
and fast Na+ transport, but also exhibits strong passivation ability
and excellent durability (Patra et al., 2019). CMK half-cells exhibit
extraordinary cycling stability and high reversible capacity in a
3.8 M NaFSI IL electrolyte in C3mpyrFSI (Figure 8A). This is due
to the contribution of anionic decomposition species in ILs leading
to inorganic SEI on mesoporous carbon CMK electrodes with high
ionic conductivity, which promotes Na+ desolvation and diffusion
kinetics. This rapid Na + migration facilitates improved reaction
rates and cycling stability (Sun et al., 2021). Graphite materials do
not perform well in the ether electrolyte of NaFSI, where side
reactions occur between the electrolyte and the graphite
electrode, and the formation of SEI films, which consist mainly
of salt decomposition products and hydrocarbons, as shown in
Figure 8B, leading to a low Coulomb efficiency of the studied cell
system (Maibach et al., 2017; Goktas et al., 2019). For the study of Na
metal electrodes in NaFSI-based organic electrolytes, electrolytes
that have been reported are high concentration electrolytes with
NaFSI and ester and ether electrolytes with additives. Among them,
The Na|| Na3V2(PO4)3 cell is stable for nearly 1,400 cycles at 2 C in a
highly concentrated electrolyte of DME with the addition of a small
In general, NaPF6-based organic electrolytes, as a commercially
available electrolyte, have good compatibility with common cathode
and anode materials. NaPF6 shows superior performance in ether
solvents compared to other sodium salts. However, the study of
NaPF6-based electrolyte body solutions (e.g., solvation structure,
sodium ion transport kinetics) is still at the beginning stage and will
be further enhanced to reveal the reasons for their superior
electrochemical performance in the future.
3.3 Sodium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (NaFSI)
based organic liquid electrolyte
The cathode materials matched to NaFSI electrolytes mainly
include layered oxides, polyanionic compounds, and organics. For
the compatibility study of layered oxide cathode materials with
NaFSI-based organic liquid electrolytes, the solvents used with
NaFSI are esters, ethers, ionic liquids. Among them,
NaNi0.68Mn0.22Co0.10O2 (NaNMC) exhibited good long-cycle
performance and capacity retention in the phosphate electrolyte
NaFSI-TEP (Figure 7A). The stable cycling can be attributed to the
formation of a stable CEI layer on the NaNMC cathode, which
suppresses the surface reconstruction of the cathode, the dissolution
of transition metals at the cathode, and the persistent side reactions
at the electrolyte/electrode interface (Jin et al., 2022).
NaFe0.4Ni0.3Ti0.3O2 matches well in electrolytes using IL solvents
(e.g., C3C1pyrrFSI). This ionic liquid electrolyte enhances the
formation of passivation layer on the surface of Al current
collectors, stabilizes the surface to 5 V, and prevents Al corrosion
even at 55°C (Otaegui et al., 2015). For the compatibility study of
polyanionic compounds with NaFSI electrolytes, NVP in NaFSI
electrolytes with ester solvents and ionic liquids has high Coulombic
efficiency, fast charging capability, stable cycling, high reversible
capacity and capacity retention (Jian et al., 2013; Manohar et al.,
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FIGURE 8
Compatibility of sodium NaFSI-based electrolytes with different anode materials: (A) cycling stability tests of Na/CMK cells in carbonate and ionic
liquid electrolytes (Sun et al., 2021). (B) Schematic representation of the surface processes occurring at this particular graphite/TEG-DME electrolyte
interface (Maibach et al., 2017). (C) Schematic representation of the sodium-solvated and interfacial structures of NaFSI and NaDCA on sodium-metal
surfaces in the [C3mpyr]DCA IL systems (Forsyth et al., 2019). (D) Cycling performance Na/NVP in NaFSI/DME electrolyte with TTE using STD, HCE,
and LHCE, and schematic of Na+ solventization and formation of SEI on sodium metal surface (Wang Y. et al., 2021).
contributing to the design and implementation of flame-retardant
batteries, may be the trend for this electrolyte.
amount of SbF3 at 4 mol L-1 NaFSI and also exhibits excellent
multiplicative performance of 80 mAh g-1 at 40°C. This is because
the SbF3 additive forms a hard Na-Sb alloy layer, while the high
concentration contributes to the formation of a dense NaF-rich SEI
layer on the Na metal surface. This bilayer structure of the SEI layer
effectively prevents dendrite growth and provides fast interfacial ion
transport (Fang et al., 2020). The addition of NaFSI to methyl
propylpyrrole dicyandiamide ([C3mpyr]DCA) ionic liquid produces
a more stable SEI layer (Figure 8C) (Forsyth et al., 2019). The
addition of 1,1,2,2-tetrafluoroethyl-2,2,3,3-tetrafluoropropylether
(TTE) to 3.8 M NaFSI/DME electrolyte forms a localized high
concentration electrolyte (LHCE), which helps to construct a
stable SEI for SMBs. TTE also decomposes on Na metal anodes,
synergistically forming dense SEI with low surface resistance and
good mechanical properties, rich in NaF, which facilitates the
transport of Na+ ions and inhibits the growth of Na dendrites
(Figure 8D) (Wang Y. et al., 2021). Transformation-based anode
materials (e.g., Cu1.8S/C (Li H. et al., 2021), SnP nanocrystals (NCs)
(Liu J. et al., 2018), tin phosphide (Sn4P3) (Mogensen et al., 2017;
Mogensen et al., 2018)) in FSI-based organic electrolytes exhibited
stable cycling ability and high capacity. Both NaFSI and FEC
additives contribute to the formation of a stable NaF-rich SEI on
the anode surface.
In general, NaFSI electrolytes dissolved in carbonate ester and
ionic liquids exhibit better electrochemical performance and have
better compatibility for hard carbon electrodes and sodium metal
electrodes compared to other sodium salt electrolytes. In the future,
combining different types of cathode and anode electrodes to
assemble a complete battery for electrochemical testing, as well as
Frontiers in Chemistry
3.4 Sodium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)
imide (NaTFSI)-based organic liquid
electrolyte
The cathode materials adapted to NaTFSI-based organic liquid
electrolytes for electrochemical testing mainly include layered oxides
and polyanionic compounds. Layered oxides (P2-type Na2/3Ni1/3Mn2/
3O2 (Risthaus et al., 2018), Na0.45Ni0.22Co0.11Mn0.66O2 (Chagas et al.,
2014), and Na0.44MnO2 (Stigliano et al., 2022)) exhibited high discharge
capacity and capacity retention in the ionic liquid electrolyte with
NaTFSI. For the polyanionic compound, NaFePO4/Na half-cells in
sodium
bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide
(NaTFSI)-bonded
butylmethylpyrrolidine (BMP)-TFSI ionic liquid (IL) electrolyte
operate at 3 V. This IL electrolyte shows high thermal stability and
non-flammability. NaFePO4 has the best capacity at 50 °C in 0.5 M
NaTFSI mixed IL electrolyte (Wongittharom et al., 2014).
The most commonly used anode material for NaTFSI organic
electrolyte is hard carbon. NaTFSI organic electrolytes used for hard
carbon electrodes include ester electrolytes and ionic liquid
electrolytes. Among them, hard carbon electrodes in 2 M
NaTFSI/EC:DMC electrolyte provided the best initial reversible
capacity, high electrochemical stability, and good cycling stability.
In addition, a sharp capacity decay was observed after cycling in an
ultra-high concentration electrolyte (5 M NaTFSI/EC: DMC)
(Figures 9A,B) (Chen et al., 2020). In NaTFSI/EC: DMC
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FIGURE 9
Compatibility of sodium NaFSI-based electrolytes with HCSs materials: (A) Schematic diagram of the interaction mechanism of HCSs electrodes in
ultra-high concentration electrolytes and (B) cycling performance at 0.1C of HCSs in electrolytes with different salt concentrations (Chen et al., 2020). (C)
Cycling capacity for HC electrodes using 1 M NaPF6 in EC:DMC with addition of 1.5% and 3% of FEC or DMCF(Fondard et al., 2020).
part of the formation of CEI films. As shown in Figure 10A. Wang
et al. (2023) investigated the compatibility of NaODFB electrolyte
with NVP cathode.1 M NaODFB-DME electrolyte contributed to
the formation of thinner CEI film on the surface of NVP material
with low content of B2O3, which resulted in high specific capacity
and capacity retention of the cell. Zhao et al. (2022) investigated the
compatibility of NaODFB ether electrolyte with HC anode at high
temperature. The Na/HC half-cell with 1 M NaODFB in DME has a
high reversible capacity of 249.9 mAh/g at 100 mA/g and 55°C,
exhibiting excellent cycling stability attributed to the SEI membrane
groups B-F and B-O containing inorganic substances. Gao et al.
(2022) found that there was a dense and smooth SEI film on the
surface of sodium sheets after cycling in NaODFB-based carbonate
electrolyte, and the SEI film could effectively inhibit the growth of
sodium dendrites. They provide insight into the underlying
mechanism of the protective effect provided by SEI derived from
sodium difluoro (oxalate)borate (NaDFOB) (Figure 10B). The prereduction of the DFOB− contributes to the formation of SEI and
inhibits the decomposition of the carbonate solvent, and the DFOB−
is gradually transformed into a borate- and fluoride-rich SEI with
cycling. The protective effect of SEI is optimized at 50 cycles,
resulting in a threefold increase in the lifetime of the sodium
metal batteries.
In summary, NaDFOB has high compatibility with various
common solvents used for NIBs, which means that NaDFOB may
be very effective for various electrode materials for other NIBs.
However, the preliminary work mainly focused on its application as
an additive. We should optimize the electrolyte of NaODFB as the main
salt and apply it to the full battery. Further studies on the complex
interactions of NaDFOB electrolytes with different solvents with various
electrode materials are also necessary. The goal of exploring its full
potential as a emerging and high-performance electrolyte for sodium
ion batteries will be realized in the future.
electrolyte, the addition of FEC or DMCF was found to be beneficial
for overall capacity and capacity retention during cycling
(Figure 9C) (Fondard et al., 2020).
In addition, some applications of NaTFSI-based electrolytes in
full batteries have been reported. For example, the full cell consisting
of Na3V2(PO4)2F3 cathode and (Na2+xTi4O9/C) anode exhibited
high capacity retention in a nonflammable low eutectic solvent
(DES) including sodium bis(trifluoromethane) sulfonate
(NaTFSI) dissolved in N-methylacetamide (NMA). The improved
electrochemical stability was associated with a stronger surface film
formed at the electrode/electrolyte interface (De Sloovere et al.,
2022). P2-Na0.6Ni0.22Fe0.11Mn0.66O2 cathode and Nanostructured
Sb-C composite anode cells in a 0.2M NaTFSIPyr14TFSI ionic
liquid-based electrolyte exhibited high specific capacity for the
full cell. The electrolyte has a high ionic conductivity and high
thermal stability. The anodic stability of this electrolyte was up to
4.7 V vs. Na+/Na (Hasa et al., 2016).
In general, NaTFSI ionic liquid electrolytes show good
electrochemical performance. However, there are some problems,
such as corrosion of the aluminum foil, capacity decay and some
disadvantages of the ionic liquid electrolyte itself (e.g., high viscosity,
poor wettability to the electrode, etc.). Efforts are still needed to
improve these shortcomings in the future.
3.5 Sodium difluoroxalate borate (NaODFB)based organic liquid electrolyte
Sodium difluoro (oxalato)borate (NaODFB) is a new chelated
sodium salt discovered by researchers in recent years. Only a few
articles have been published to study this electrolyte. Chen et al.
(Chen et al., 2015) found that Na/Na0.44MnO2 half-cells combined
with NaDFOB-based electrolytes exhibited greatly enhanced
multiplicative capacity and cycling performance. Sun et al. (Sun
et al., 2020) developed a high-capacity nanoconstrained FeF3 SIBbased cathode and found that the best cycling performance was
achieved using NaDFOB salts in a ternary electrolyte (EC:DEC:
DMC), with much higher cycling performance compared to the
conventionally used NaClO4, which was associated with the
formation of a thin and conformal CEI protective film on the
cathode. They further predicted that the DFOB anion reductionmediated radical oligomer/polymer pathway may be an important
Frontiers in Chemistry
4 Composition, formation mechanism
and regulation strategy of the interface
between electrolyte and electrode
The study of the solid-liquid interface formed between
electrolyte and electrode material is a hot research topic in the
field of batteries. The solid-liquid interface film is formed between
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FIGURE 10
Compatibility of sodium NaODFB-based electrolytes with different electrode materials: (A) Pathway of CEI film formation by FeF3 in NaODFB-based
electrolyte (Chen et al., 2015). (B) Schematic illustrations of the NaDFOB-derived SEI structure on the surface of sodium metal (Gao et al., 2022).
the electrolyte and electrode material during the first cycle of
charging and discharging, and the presence of the interface film
prevents the electrolyte from continuously contacting the electrode
material and decomposing, thus allowing the electrochemical
window of the electrolyte to be extended. Factors such as the
denseness, thickness and components of the solid-liquid
interfacial film have a great influence on the cycling performance
of the battery, and obtaining a stable interfacial film with protective
effect and stable Na+ transport has been the goal pursued by
researchers.
inorganic with some sodium, and the organic layer is mostly
organic with sodium formed by the reaction of solvent molecules
with sodium. The formation of such a bilayer structure can be
divided into two stages, namely, the formation of a bilayer on the
surface when electrons flow into the anode and the participation of
electrons in the reaction process. When the anode is filled with
electrons, Na+ will be enriched on the electrode surface to form a
bilayer. At the beginning the passivation film is thin and electron
transfer is easy, so the double electron reaction occurs preferentially.
The solvent molecules of the solubilized coordinated Na+ get
electrons to be reduced and are more likely to produce inorganic
products such as Na2CO3 and Na2O, which are precipitated on the
electrode surface, while at the same time, sodium salt anions or
additives may also participate in the reaction to produce NaF, NaCl,
NaS, and Na2SO4, etc (Hu et al., 2020). The positive effect of NaF on
dense SEI formation and unstable interphase growth control.
Content increases appropriately to suppress the solubility of
organic sodium carbonate (NaO2CO-C2H4-OCO2Na) and
promote the conductivity of Na+ through the SEI layer, thus
improving the electrochemical properties, whereas an increase in
Na2CO3 content does not (Fondard et al., 2020). F-S or S=O species
were also detected in the case of FSI− or bis(trifluoromethane)
sulfonylimine (TFSI−) anions (Ding et al., 2019). However, as the
thickness of the membrane increases, electron transfer is blocked
and single-electron reactions begin to dominate, with organic
species such as ROCO2Na (R is an organic group) organically
accumulating on the inorganic layer to form an organic layer.
The specific species of the organic and inorganic components
depend on the reaction between the electrode surface and the
electrolyte. Different electrode materials have different SEI
components in different electrolyte systems. The thickness of the
SEI film is usually between a few nanometers and tens of
nanometers, which is mainly related to the electron tunneling
distance, and if there is no surface damage or decomposition,
after reaching the longest distance of electron tunneling, the
solvent will not be able to continue to get electrons to be
reduced and thus stop decomposing, and the thickness change of
the SEI film will decrease and become an electron insulator and ion
conductor, and stabilized (Hu et al., 2020). Recently, Cui et al.
(Zhang et al., 2022) revealed the original structure and redefined the
composition of SEI by using advanced cryo-electron microscopy to
characterize the swelling state of SEI in various electrolytes, and
showed that the swelling behavior depends on the electrolyte type
4.1 Composition
In 1979, Peled (1979) found that alkali and alkaline earth metals
in non-aqueous batteries form a surface film in contact with the
electrolyte, which is an intermediate phase between the metal and
the electrolyte and has the characteristics of an electrolyte, and hence
the concept of “solid electrolyte interphase (SEI)” was introduced. At
this time he considers the SEI model to be a simple two-dimensional
passivation film structure. In 1997, Peled et al. (1997) suggested the
mosaic model by arguing that insolubles generated from all types of
reduction reactions of the electrolyte occurring simultaneously are
deposited randomly mixed on the anode and stacked on each other
to form a mosaic-like structure. In this model, grain boundaries and
interfaces in SEI may act as electron conduction paths to promote
the growth of dendrites and electron leakage. In 1999, Aurbach et al.
(1999) proposed a multilayer structure of SEI films in lithium-ion
battery systems using various means such as infrared spectroscopy,
Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and
electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, arguing that the
passivation film formed at the beginning of the metallic Li
surface is unstable and changes during the electrochemical
process, with various types of substances forming one by one,
and that traces of water in the electrolyte, solute Anion
decomposition products also continue to influence the generated
SEI film to form a multilayer film structure. This dynamic concept
has also been applied to sodium ion batteries to derive bilayer and
even multilayer structure models.
It is generally believed that the electrode-electrolyte interfacial
film consists of the inorganic layer located on the inside connected to
the electrode material and the organic layer located on the outside
extending into the electrolyte. The inorganic layer is mostly
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FIGURE 11
Schematic diagram of (A) the energy of the electrode and electrolyte (Gebresilassie Eshetu et al., 2018), (B) specific adsorption (Zhang and Zhao,
2009), (C) ion solventization (Li et al., 2020), (D) interface film formation, and (E) interfacial film growth and evolution.
the surface of the cathode, defined as the CEI passivation layer. To
ensure a higher energy density, one chooses to initiate the redox
reaction of the electrode at a voltage that exceeds the stability of the
electrolyte. It is well known that non-aqueous electrolytes typically
used in Li-ion batteries are oxidized if the operating voltage is higher
than about 4.5 V with respect to Li+/Li. Given that the equilibrium
potential of Na+/Na is 0.3 V higher than that of Li+/Li, some
commonly
used
carbonate
electrolytes
will
become
thermodynamically unstable if the voltage in SIBs is higher than
about 4.2 V (vs. Na+/Na) (You and Manthiram, 2018).
Specific adsorption behavior and ion solvation behavior are also
the main factors affecting the formation of interfacial layers. The
occurrence of specific adsorption behavior precedes the ion
solvation behavior, i.e., the strong interaction of some substances
with the electrode surface promotes the formation of interfacial
films. The interfacial film model includes the inner Helmholtz plane
(IHP) and the outer Helmholtz plane (OHP). In general, the specific
absorption behavior of unsolvated molecules is mainly present in
IHP, while ionic solvated structures are mainly present in OHP
(Zhang and Zhao, 2009). The enrichment of specific substances
initially adsorbed on the electrode surface determines the initial
interfacial composition and structure, while the ion solvation
structure subsequently acts to promote the growth of the
interfacial layer (Yan et al., 2020). For ionic solventization
behavior, the solventized structure is mainly related to the
coordination of alkali metal cations (e.g., Na+) to electronegative
atoms of the solvent molecule (e.g., carbonyl/ether oxygen) or
anions (e.g., fluorine in NaPF6 salts). Their binding energy
depends strongly on the type of cation, anion and solvent.
Differences in the solvation structure and diffusion kinetics in
different electrolytes subsequently lead to differences in the
electrochemical properties of their organic and inorganic
interfacial products. In addition, differences in ion solvation
structures can lead to different degrees of changes in the
electrolyte LUMO energy levels. The solventized Na+ structure at
the molecular level in the electrolyte can change the preferential
decomposition order of the solvent and the anion. As the salt
concentration increases, the anions become more involved in the
solventized shell layer, driving the transfer of LUMO from the
solvent to the anion and forming an inorganic-rich interface
(Xing et al., 2018). Thus, changes in the solventization
and profoundly affects the ion transport in SEI. In the inorganic-rich
SEI, the swelling rate is lower, resulting in a more stable
electrochemical cycle of the cell.
The ideal SEI film should have the following characteristics: (i)
good electronic insulator, preventing the electrolyte from being
oxidized or reduced by charge transfer on the surface; (ii) good
sodium ion conductivity, selectively allowing the passage of Na+ and
preventing the solvent from entering the electrode material or
directly contacting the electrode; (iii) good chemical and
electrochemical stability, with no side reactions in the cell system;
(iv) good thermal stability, stably adhering to the surface of the
electrode material even at high temperatures; (v) homogeneous,
dense and thin, possessing good mechanical properties and not
easily flaking and dissolving (Hu et al., 2020).
4.2 Formation mechanism
The formation of the interfacial film is mainly the result of a
combination of three factors: the energy polarization difference
between the electrode and the electrolyte, the specific adsorption
behavior and the ion solvation behavior, and the formation is
accompanied by the interfacial growth and evolution. The
specific formation mechanism is shown in Figure 11. The details
of each part are developed below.
The interfacial film arises from the difference in energy states
between the two main parts of the electrode and the electrolyte
(Gauthier et al., 2015). If the electrochemical potential μA of the
anode is higher than the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital
LUMO of the electrolyte, electrons are spontaneously transferred
from the anode to the electrolyte, which leads to the reduction of the
electrolyte and the formation of the interfacial film. Similarly, when
the electrochemical potential μC of the cathode is lower than the
highest occupied molecular orbital level HOMO of the electrolyte,
electrons are transferred from the electrolyte to the anode and the
solvent molecules of the electrolyte lose electrons leading to
oxidation of the solvent, while the anode gains electrons and the
transition metal cations (such as Mn4+, Ni4+, Co4+, etc.) in the
material are reduced (Wang et al., 2020). The interfacial film on
the surface of the anode, called SEI, is distinguished from the anode,
and the products of electrolyte oxidation decomposition remain on
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FIGURE 12
Modulation strategies for interfacial films.
electrochemical stability of the outer organic components. It
determines which component is polymerized first and to what
extent the dissolution and growth of the interfacial layer can
occur. In particular, for some carbon anode materials with
special microstructures (e.g., mesopores or nanopores), inward
growth may occur inside the material (Bommier et al., 2016).
The interfacial phase growth is related to the electrochemical
reactivity of the components in the matrix electrolyte in addition
to the interfacial phase components. In addition, the transport of
sodium ions in the interfacial layer is a key factor affecting the
evolution of the interfacial layer growth. The migration of Na+ ions
in the interfacial layer is related to the desolvation process associated
with the solventization behavior, the migration of Na+ ions through
the interfacial reaction products, and the crystallinity and
composition distribution of the interfacial layer. Among them,
the desolvation behavior of Na+ at the electrode/electrolyte
interface is a key step in determining the reaction rate. The ion
desolvation energy potential depends on a combination of factors
such as the strength of ion-solvent or ion-ion interactions, the choice
of electrode, the presence of interfacial membrane, and the
composition or structural condition of the interfacial membrane
(Yamada and Yamada, 2015; Yan et al., 2020).
environment will alter the previous order of solvent molecule or
anion consumption, determining the initial composition formation
of the internal interfacial layer, further affecting the organic/
inorganic composition arrangement, structural evolution and
overall ion transport capacity. The ionic solventization behavior
is the main induction of surface interfacial phase formation and
depends on the reduction/oxidation order of solvent molecules or
anions (Li et al., 2020). The solvent-induced interfacial layer is
dominated by the predominant organic matter in dilute electrolytes.
However, the anion-induced interfacial layer in highly concentrated
electrolytes consists of more inorganic species, such as NaF, NaCl
and Na2CO3 (Zeng et al., 2018; Zheng et al., 2018; Yamada et al.,
2019).
In addition to the regulation of specific adsorbed species during
electrochemistry, the subsequent interfacial evolution is extremely
important. The successive interfacial reactions are mainly driven by
electron transfer based on a radical reaction mechanism. Usually,
the outer organic layer is vulnerable to attack due to the preferential
propagation of free radicals at the interface between the outer
interfacial phase layer and the electrolyte, leading to organic
polymerization (Soto et al., 2015). The evolutionary origin of the
interfacial layer is therefore largely dependent on the
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4.3 Regulation strategy
compared to conventional molecular solvents (such as carbonates
and ethers), which exhibit relatively low ionic conductivity due to
strong interactions between their anions and cations, but they have
the advantage of high electrochemical and thermal stability due to
their low vapor pressure and low flammability. Therefore, hybrid
electrolytes obtained by mixing ionic liquids with conventional
molecular solvents such as organic carbonates can be used, thus
combining all advantages to obtain interfacial layers with better
performance (Monti et al., 2016; Manohar et al., 2018b).
Anionic salts, another major player in the solventized structure,
play a crucial role in the oxidative decomposition of electrolytes
along with the solvent. Some anions, such as BF4− and PF6−, have
been found to reduce the oxidative stability of common carbonate
solvents, such as EC, PC and DMC, through fluorine or proton
transfer reactions (Borodin and Jow, 2010). In addition, oxidation
between the salt anion and the solvent through electrostatic
interactions may occur accompanied by charge transfer
phenomena to reach the final coupled state. This determines the
oxidative stability of the solventized salt (Fadel et al., 2019). When
Na+ is transported through the interfacial layer, anions with lower
donor numbers (e.g., PF6− and ClO4−) are more easily desolvated
(Browning et al., 2017). Therefore, different anion-solvent
complexes can have different effects on electrolyte oxidation
stability during electrolyte decomposition on the cathode surface
(Borodin and Jow, 2010; Xing et al., 2011; Cresce et al., 2015; Fadel
et al., 2019). Different salts (e.g., NaClO4, NaFSI, NaTFSI) undergo
different pathways when decomposed on the cathode surface,
resulting in components with different properties that affect the
performance of the interfacial layer. Therefore, mixed anions may
provide additional benefits in regulating the interfacial chemistry.
At present, the regulation strategy for interfacial film mainly
includes four parts: electrolyte body regulation, concentration
regulation, addition of functional additives and construction of
artificial interfacial film (Figure 12). They are described as follows.
4.3.1 Electrolyte body
The actual state of the SEI actually depends on the choice of
electrolyte composition, which determines to what extent the
arrangement of inorganic and organic substances favors the final
interfacial function. The current interfacial manipulation through
the electrolyte ontology is mostly focused on the solventized
structure of Na+, where the electrolyte solvent, salt anion, is
involved (Hou et al., 2019), and a smaller percentage of external
organic compounds by changing the solvent and sodium salt
combination.
Solvents, as one of the participants in the solventized structure,
mainly include esters, ethers and ionic liquids. For ester-based
electrolytes, linear solvents can reduce the electrolyte viscosity
and enhance the wettability, but usually linear solvents (DMC,
DEC) are weakly coordinated with Na+ in the solventized
structure, and therefore have high reactivity with the outer
interfacial layer, which makes the interfacial layer unstable and
may also increase the solubility of the interfacial layer (Xia et al.,
2011; Ponrouch et al., 2013; Eshetu et al., 2016). The solventization
of Na+ with cyclic EC and EC:PC is more favorable than that of
linear solvents. Although the structural differences between EC and
PC are small, the methyl group in PC may hinder the aggregation of
reaction products from the perspective of long-term cell operation,
resulting in insufficient formation of interphase layers (Takenaka
and Nagaoka, 2019). In addition, since the LUMO level of Na+solvent complexes decreases by 2–3 ev in varying degrees compared
to a single solvent, the Na+-solvent complexes are more easily
reduced on the anode surface and the increase in the
HOMOLUMO energy band gap also leads to a longer operating
window of the electrolyte. The addition of EC solvents to PC, DMC,
EMC or DEC solvents results in the formation of a co-solvent, which
reduces the band gap (Shakourian-Fard et al., 2015). Therefore,
mixing different ratios of cyclic molecules (e.g., EC and PC) and
chain molecules (DMC and DEC)) may lead to unexpected
advantages. For ether solvents, such solvents can not only coinsert Na+ into graphite (Jache and Adelhelm, 2014; Kim et al.,
2015; Cohn et al., 2016; Seidl et al., 2017), but also modulate the SEI
passivation layer of the anode electrode material so that the
interfacial phase composition has a better sodium ion transport
rate and the generated passivation layer is thin and uniform (Soto
et al., 2015; Wang C. et al., 2017; Zhang et al., 2017; He et al., 2018;
Huang et al., 2019; Li et al., 2019). Among them, the special structure
of amorphous Na2CO3 and NaF particles dispersed in polyether
species improves the electrical conductivity of Na+ (Huang et al.,
2019). However, the ether-derived interfacial phase is slightly lower
than the ester-derived interfacial phase in terms of long-cycle
performance. One optimizes the formation of the interfacial layer
for high rate and long cycle performance by combining ester and
ether, where the thick and loose ester-SEI is initially formed on the
inside and the thin and dense ether-SEI is on the outside (Bai et al.,
2018). ILs are actually salts in liquid state at room temperature
Frontiers in Chemistry
4.3.2 Concentration effect
The concentration effect is an important interfacial modulation
strategy, and adjusting the optimized concentration can accordingly
modulate the interfacial passivation chemistry to achieve an
organic-inorganic equilibrium SEI layer. Traditionally, most
electrolytes with optimized salt concentrations around 1 M
exhibit the highest ionic conductivity (Yamada et al., 2019).
Although the increase in salt concentration decreases the ionic
conductivity, it exhibits special advantages in terms of enhanced
interfacial properties and electrochemical behavior that
conventional electrolytes do not possess. The decomposition
order between solvent and salt differs with salt concentration. At
conventional dilution concentrations the solvent decomposes
preferentially, while at high concentrations, where there are
almost no free solvent molecules left due to the urgent need to
satisfy the dissolution of a large number of cations, the anion is
forced to be decomposed first (Yamada and Yamada, 2015; 2017;
Yamada et al., 2019; Yan et al., 2020). Li et al. (2020) found that, by
reducing the sodium salt concentration (0.3 mol NaPF6/EC + PC (1:
1 by volume)), the solvent molecules can fully occupy the Na+
solventized sheath layer, and the CEI and SEI films with high
organic content (high C + O ratio) can be obtained on the
cathode and anode sides. As the concentration of PF6− is
reduced, the decomposition by-products such as F, which has a
corrosive effect on the electrode materials, are reduced, and the
obtained SEI and CEI films are more stable. On the contrary, when
applying high salt concentration electrolyte, the Na+ solvated sheath
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of stable interfacial films and need to be used in combination with
different electrolyte and electrode systems for screening. In
addition, the combined use of different additives may also be
beneficial to achieve the desired stable interfacial film.
layer (or ligand layer) is almost occupied by anions. This will bring
some special advantages. For example, the interfacial mass transfer
process is changed and fast reactions can be performed on the
electrode, the electrolyte volatility is weakened, the thermodynamic
stability is enhanced and the safety is improved, the good SEI film
can be formed on the electrode, and the Al collector is protected
from anion corrosion. Increasing sodium salt concentration has an
effect on the properties of the Na+ solubilization environment
(Wahlers et al., 2016; Chen et al., 2018; Kankanamge et al., 2018;
Li et al., 2018), charge transport mechanism (Forsyth et al., 2016;
Kankanamge et al., 2018), and Na+ conductivity (Forsyth et al., 2016;
Kankanamge et al., 2018). In addition, the overall ionic conductivity
of the ether solvent-based electrolytes showed a tendency to increase
with increasing sodium salt concentration. Electrolytes based on
ionic liquid solvents promote ionic movement with the continuous
addition of salts (Chen et al., 2018). Therefore, there are concepts of
hyperconcentration and localized high concentration electrolytes
have been proposed in recent years. Superconcentration because it
promotes preferential passivation of LUMO-level reducing anions,
which in turn creates a more powerful inorganic SEI that can better
mitigate the more severe solubility problems of organic components.
Moreover, a lower percentage of free solvent molecules will mitigate
the tendency of soluble components to dissolve into the electrolyte
(Takada et al., 2017). Localized high electrolyte concentrations not
only do not alter the local dissolution environment of the
concentrated electrolyte, but also provide the advantage of
interface enhancement or suppression of undesirable interface
problems (Zheng et al., 2018; Yamada et al., 2019).
4.3.4 Artificial interface film
Usually, the electrode itself is attacked by the highly reactive
electrolyte, which may undergo structural changes or cause surface
defects, etc. This will lead to further decomposition of the electrolyte,
resulting in lower first-loop Coulomb efficiency and thicker interfacial
films. Therefore, surface coating of the electrode can effectively improve
its surface properties and improve the compatibility with the electrolyte.
In fact, some of the cladding work done at the cathode is also equivalent
to artificially creating CEI films. By using atomic layer deposition (ALD)
to coat metal oxides (AlO3, TiO2 and MgO), metal fluorides and even
solid electrolytes on the surface of the cathode material, these coatings
maintain the stability of the reversible phase change of the cathode
material during charging and discharging, or prevent the erosion of the
cathode material by by-products such as HF, or provide better channels
for Na+ transport provides a better channel and acts as a CEI film. For
example, Sun et al. (Hwang et al., 2017a) changed the interfacial
properties of the cathode by coating a layer of nano-Al2O3 on the
surface of Na[Ni0.6Co0.2Mn0.2]O2 cathode. On the one hand, nanoAl2O3 can react with F present in the electrolyte to reduce the content of
HF and prevent the continuous accumulation of NaF as a by-product to
hinder Na+ conduction; on the other hand, AlF3, the product of nanoAl2O3 and HF, can enhance the protection of the cathode material by
CEI film as a good component of CEI film. With the synergistic effect of
the two, the change of interfacial impedance of the coated cathode
material during the cycling process was significantly smaller than that
before the coating, and the presence of the coating layer also helped to
reduce the leaching of transition metals from the active material. Ye
et al. (2022) reported an in situ artificial CEI construction strategy based
on a spontaneous redox reaction between a pre-sodiumed organic
solvent and a polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) binder. Applying this
strategy to PB cathodes, the chemically pretreated PB cathodes were
successfully coated with a NaF-rich interfacial phase on the electrode
surface to keep them away from electrolyte attack and maintain cycling
stability. This artificial CEI based on the interaction between PVDF and
organic solvents is not much affected by the surface properties of the
cathode material and is expected to be applied to other cathode
materials. Therefore, the construction of artificial interfacial film is
also an effective means to improve the compatibility of electrode with
electrolyte and avoid some side reactions.
In summary, there are four common effective strategies for the
regulation of solid electrolyte interfacial film. In practice, it is necessary
to consider the characteristics of the electrolyte and electrode materials
to choose the appropriate regulation. If the electrolyte body has a great
influence on the interfacial membrane, it can try to use different salt and
solvent mixing to regulate the interfacial membrane. If the electrolyte
interfacial film is regulated on the basis of not changing the electrolyte
body, the concentration of electrolyte or functional additives can be
changed to achieve the purpose of regulating the appropriate interfacial
film. If the interfacial film formed inside the battery system is unstable
and cannot be improved by adjusting the electrolyte body,
concentration, or additives, a suitable artificial interfacial film can be
constructed from the electrodes to realize excellent electrochemical
performance.
4.3.3 Functional additives
Additivity refers to the introduction of small doses of foreign
molecules into the parent electrolyte. As one of the most
economical interfacial modulation strategies, the addition of
additives not only does not interfere with the overall properties
of the electrolyte, but also significantly tunes the interfacial layer
properties to better form films for interphase passivation for
electrode protection and thus improve the overall
electrochemical performance. Currently, FEC is the most widely
reported and effective additive. Its energy gap, Eg is located
between the HOMO-LUMO gap of salt and solvent, thus FEC
can stabilize the interfacial layer by sacrificing decomposition in
advance thus avoiding destructive decomposition of electrolyte
(Wang et al., 2020). For example, the reason for the good
performance in EC-based electrolytes containing FEC is that
FEC has lower decomposition energy compared to EC solvents,
and the presence of FEC also enhances the decomposition energy
of EC molecules, so that its early decomposition in EC-based
electrolytes promotes the generation of interfacial films (Kumar
et al., 2016). In PC-based electrolytes, FEC also shows good film
formation due to its still early decomposition compared to PC
(Takenaka et al., 2015). It should be noted here that due to the
strong electronegativity of F atoms, FEC attracts the positive
charge of organic products, and excess FEC prevents the
formation of dimers between organic monomer products, a
phenomenon that causes undesired interfacial layer growth and
adversely affects the stability of interfacial films (Takenaka et al.,
2015; Simone et al., 2017; Bouibes et al., 2018). In addition to FEC,
other additives as described above also contribute to the formation
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5 Conclusion and outlook
of the electrolyte exhibit reduced flammability. The use of nonflammable solvents instead of traditional flammable solvents is
attractive because they can make the electrolyte completely nonflammable. Electrolyte reformulation consisting of flame
retardant additives and overcharge additives is economical
and effective. However, the high cost required for
nonflammable electrolytes is a significant limitation to their
commercialization.
(3) The electrolyte of sodium ion battery, as a medium for the
cathode and anode materials to participate in the redox reaction,
its redox window, the migration and diffusion of sodium ions,
the solventized structure of sodium ions, and the coupling
correlation effect between sodium ions and anions or
solvents are the key factors that determine the interfacial
properties of electrode materials. In addition, the sensitive
nature of the interfacial phase increases the difficulty of
characterization and limits our understanding of the
interfacial phase. Regulation of electrolyte proprieties,
concentration effects, electrolyte additives, and artificial
interfacial films are effective methods to manipulate
interphase formation. To meet the requirements of
applications, the enhancement of interfacial composition,
structure, and stability requires more fundamental work,
theoretical computational studies, and advanced testing and
analysis methods.
With the advantages of abundant sodium resources and low cost,
sodium ion batteries are a promising energy storage battery system. At
present, researchers at home and abroad have developed a variety of
feasible cathode and anode materials for sodium ion batteries. The
electrolyte of sodium ion battery, as a medium for the cathode and
anode materials to participate in the redox reaction, has an important
influence on the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the sodium
ion battery system, such as the structural stability of the electrode
materials, the composition and structure of the SEI, the multiplicative
performance, cycling stability and thermal stability of the battery.
Therefore, electrolyte is also the key to determine the battery
performance. This paper introduces the research progress of
organic liquid electrolytes for sodium ion batteries from the basic
requirements and composition of organic liquid electrolytes, the
current research status of organic liquid electrolytes, and the
composition, requirements and regulation strategies of the
interface between electrolytes and electrodes. First, an overview of
organic liquid electrolytes is introduced, followed by the classification
of organic liquid electrolytes from the perspective of sodium salts, and
the compatibility and electrochemical properties of each sodium salt
electrolyte with cathode and anode are introduced. Finally, the
strategy for electrolyte regulation of interfacial film is explained. At
present, organic liquid electrolytes for sodium ion batteries still have
problems such as narrow electrochemical windows and poor stability
of SEI films. The development of new, low-cost and high-performance
sodium ion battery electrolytes is crucial for the commercialization of
sodium ion batteries. Future research on organic liquid electrolytes for
sodium ion batteries can be carried out from the following aspects.
In conclusion, in the context of the imminent commercialization
of sodium-ion batteries, substantial progress has been made in the
research on positive and negative electrode materials. For example,
the anode materials currently used in commercialized sodium-ion
batteries are all hard carbon. There are already examples of
commercialized production of the three main types of cathode
materials. However, the organic electrolyte system used is still the
solvents (EC:PC, EC:DEC or PC as a single solvent) and the sodium
salts (NaClO4 and NaPF6). There is still a long way to go for the
commercialization of organic liquid electrolytes corresponding to
specific scenarios (high voltage, wide temperature, non-flammable).
In the future, for the development of organic liquid electrolytes,
great efforts are still needed to design safer electrolytes and more
stable interfaces for SIBs. The optimization of electrolyte and solid
electrolyte interface films will further bring sodium ion batteries
closer to practical applications, allowing them to be widely used in
the direction of large-scale energy storage and promoting
commercial applications.
(1) Optimization of each individual component of the organic liquid
electrolyte, including its own physical and chemical properties
such as viscosity, conductivity, stability, etc. The compatibility of
the electrolyte with the electrode material is also crucial. For
example, the commonly used ester electrolyte cannot be applied to
graphite anode materials, but the ether electrolyte allows sodium
ions to enter the interlayer energy storage in a solventized form.
The selection of additives also needs to consider the compatibility
with electrolyte and electrode materials as well. In addition, in the
future, we should try to explore the internal energy balance of
solvent molecules from the perspective of molecular dynamics
simulation and analyze the sodium storage mechanism of sodium
ion battery in combination with the special structure of electrode
materials, which is more conducive to enhance the matching of
electrolyte and electrode materials to achieve high capacity
requirements. In conclusion, we should focus on the matching
of electrode electrolyte and the development of new sodium salts
and additives to achieve high performance of sodium ion batteries.
(2) Battery safety is the most important key indicator of market and
customer concern. Commonly used organic electrolytes cannot
operate properly in high temperature environments, so the use
of stable Na salts and non-flammable solvents including ionic
liquids and phosphate esters to replace traditional flammable
solvents, as well as the addition of flame retardant additives and
overcharge additives are within consideration to achieve sodium
ion battery safety. In general, the use of stable Na salts increases
the thermal stability of the electrolyte, and high concentrations
Frontiers in Chemistry
Author contributions
JZ: Writing–original draft, Writing–review and editing. JL:
Writing–review and editing. HW: Writing–review and editing.
MW: Conceptualization, Supervision, Writing–review and editing.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the
absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be
construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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Publisher’s note
organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the
reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or
claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or
endorsed by the publisher.
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors
and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated
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