Peter Staar, Panagiotis Kl. Barkoutsos, et al.
IPDPS 2016
The electrolyte role in non-aqueous lithium/air batteries is attracting a lot of attention in several research groups, because of its fundamental importance in producing the appropriate reversible electrochemical reduction. While recent published works identify the lithium superoxide as the main degrading agent for propylene carbonate (PC), there is no clear experimental evidence that the oxygen at the cathode interface layer does not reduce further to peroxide before reacting with PC. Here, we investigate the reactivity of lithium peroxide versus propylene carbonate and find that Li 2O 2 irreversibly decomposes the carbonate solvent, leading to alkyl carbonates. We also show that, compared with a single Li 2O 2 unit in PC, a crystalline surface of Li 2O 2 exhibits an enhanced reactivity. Our findings support the possibility that in lithium/air cells, oxygen may still be reduced to peroxide, with the formation of solid Li 2O 2, which degrades by decomposing PC. Copyright © 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Peter Staar, Panagiotis Kl. Barkoutsos, et al.
IPDPS 2016
Ronaldo Giro, Brenda S. Ferrari, et al.
ACS Fall 2024
Antonio Cardinale, Alessandro Castrogiovanni, et al.
Chimia
Valery Weber, Costas Bekas, et al.
IPDPS 2014