Abstract
With a high theoretical specific energy, the non-aqueous rechargeable lithium–oxygen battery is a promising next-generation energy storage technique. However, the large charging overpotential remains a challenge due to the difficulty in electrochemically oxidizing the insulating lithium peroxide. Recently, a redox shuttle has been introduced into the electrolyte to chemically oxidize lithium peroxide. Here, we report the use of a triiodide/iodide redox shuttle to couple a built-in dye-sensitized titanium dioxide photoelectrode with the oxygen electrode for the photoassisted charging of a lithium–oxygen battery. On charging under illumination, triiodide ions are generated on the photoelectrode, and subsequently oxidize lithium peroxide. Due to the contribution of the photovoltage, the charging overpotential is greatly reduced. The use of a redox shuttle to couple a photoelectrode and an oxygen electrode offers a unique strategy to address the overpotential issue of non-aqueous lithium–oxygen batteries and also a distinct approach for integrating solar cells and batteries.
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Introduction
The lithium–oxygen (Li–O2) batteries are recently attracting increasing research attention because of their higher specific energy density compared with conventional Li-ion batteries1,2,3,4,5,6,7. In a typical non-aqueous rechargeable Li–O2 battery, lithium peroxide (Li2O2) is the discharging product formed on the oxygen electrode surface and is oxidized back to O2 and Li+ in a following charging process. However, the insulating property of bulk Li2O2 and the sluggish kinetics of the Li2O2 oxidation reaction make it difficult to electrochemically decompose Li2O2 efficiently8. This leads to a severe charging overpotential issue, which causes not only a very low battery round-trip efficiency, but also the decompositions of the oxygen electrode and electrolyte3,4,7,9. Recently, redox shuttles, such as tetrathiafulvalene (TTF+/TTF), have been introduced in the battery electrolyte to address this poor charge transport issue10,11,12,13,14. During the charging process, the reduced form of the redox shuttle, Mred, is first converted to Mox on the oxygen electrode, which in turn oxidizes the Li2O2. By efficiently shuttling charges between Li2O2 particles and the oxygen electrode surface, it facilitates the oxidation of Li2O2 and therefore reduces the overpotential13,14.
In this work, we introduce the approach of using a redox shuttle to couple a photoelectrode with the oxygen electrode in non-aqueous Li–O2 batteries, which enables the photoassisted charging process. The photovoltage generated on the photoelectrode compensates the battery’s charging voltage. By utilizing solar energy, the device can be charged with a ‘negative’ overpotential, which is otherwise thermodynamically impossible. This concept of ‘photoassisted charging process’ offers a novel strategy to address the overpotential issue of non-aqueous Li–O2 batteries and also a distinct approach for integrating solar cells and batteries15,16,17,18.
Results
General design of the solar battery
Figure 1a shows the structure of the device, named as solar battery, in this work. It consists of three electrodes: a Li-metal anode, an oxygen electrode made from carbon paper and a photoelectrode. The discharging process remains the same as that of a conventional Li–O2 battery with the formation of Li2O2 at the oxygen electrode. The charging process is, however, different. The charging voltage is applied on the Li-metal anode and the photoelectrode. Under illumination, a photoelectrochemical oxidation occurs on the photoelectrode first, converting Mred into Mox, which in turn diffuses to the oxygen electrode and oxidizes Li2O2 (Fig. 1b). In this photoassisted charging process, the photovoltage generated on the photoelectrode is utilized to compensate the required charging potential.
In general, either a dye-sensitized photoelectrode or a semiconductor-electrolyte junction can be applied in the solar battery (Fig. 1c and Supplementary Fig. 1)19,20. Figure 1c shows the energy diagram of the solar battery based on a dye-sensitized TiO2 photoelectrode20,21,22,23, as a demonstration of the concept. On charging under illumination, the photoexcited dye molecules inject electrons into the conduction band of TiO2 and are regenerated by oxidizing the Mred to Mox. The formed Mox species subsequently diffuse to the oxygen electrode, oxidize the solid Li2O2 to O2 and are reduced back to complete a full redox cycle. The charging voltage equals the energy difference between the redox potential of the Li+/Li couple and the quasi-Fermi level of electrons in the TiO2 photoelectrode (which is at best close to the conduction band minimum of TiO2, ~+2.6 V versus Li+/Li22,23, all potentials in this manuscript refer to the Li+/Li redox) (Fig. 1c). Therefore, we expect that the solar battery has a lower charging voltage than any other conventional non-aqueous Li–O2 batteries, which have their charging voltage limitation as 2.96 V (that is, the redox potential of O2/Li2O2) controlled by thermodynamics.
The I3−/I− redox couple for non-aqueous Li–O2 batteries
For dye-sensitized TiO2 solar cells, the triiodide/iodide (I3−/I−) redox couple is a benchmark electrolyte for the dye regeneration24. Despite being mentioned in a patent12 and a very recent publication14, not much attention has been placed on utilizing I3−/I− redox couple for non-aqueous Li–O2 batteries. Therefore, we started with investigating the I3−/I− couple as a redox shuttle for Li–O2 batteries. The cyclic voltammetry (CV) reveals that the redox potential of I3−/I− couple in 1 M LiClO4/dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solution is about +3.55 V (Supplementary Fig. 2), consistent with earlier study24. Hence, the oxidization of Li2O2 by I3− is considered to be thermodynamically favourable with a driving force of 0.59 V (3.55 V−2.96 V=0.59 V). Meanwhile, the CV shape of I3−/I− redox kept almost identical when the argon atmosphere was replaced by oxygen, indicating its good stability. Li–O2 batteries were then assembled with surface pretreated Li-metal foil as the anode25, commercial P50 carbon paper as the oxygen electrode and a piece of glassy fibre separator9,26,27 in between. A solution of 0.1 M LiI and 1 M LiClO4 in DMSO was used as the electrolyte. (For experimental details, see Methods). The batteries were cycled under one atmosphere of pure O2. A comparison of discharge–charge curves between batteries with and without the redox shuttle is shown in Fig. 2a. At a current flow of 0.16 mA cm−2, on charging, the battery with LiI showed a voltage plateau at about 3.5 V, matching well with the I3−/I− redox potential. In contrast, the battery without LiI in the electrolyte had its charging voltage quickly climbing up to above 4.0 V. Moreover, batteries with LiI could be charged with a voltage around 3.6 V even at a current flow as high as 0.47 mA cm−2 (Supplementary Fig. 3a). Their cyclability was also evaluated. As shown in Fig. 2b, the batteries could be cycled at 0.16 mA cm−1 for at least 25 cycles with only small performance decay. More detailed analysis and discussion of the battery performance are presented in the Supplementary Information (Supplementary Figs 3 and 4).
The dye-sensitized TiO2-based solar battery
With the I3−/I− couple demonstrated as an efficient redox shuttle for Li–O2 batteries, we then consider the structural details of a solar battery. The photoelectrode was a titanium metal gauze decorated with rutile-phase TiO2 nanorods (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 5) and sensitized by the Ruthenizer 535 bis-TBA dye (N719) (ref. 28). The open structure of the wire gauze allows the diffusion of oxygen through the photoelectrode to the oxygen electrode. To test the photochemical activity of this dye-sensitized TiO2 electrode, a solar cell was fabricated. Its photocurrent–voltage curve shows that such a photoelectrode is capable of generating an open-circuit voltage of about 0.73 V under illumination (Fig. 3b). In such a dye-sensitized TiO2 solar cell, the dye regeneration reaction, which eventually yields I3− from I−, is an ‘in situ’ process with the time constant on micron-second scale24,29. Meanwhile, the robustness of the I3− in oxidizing Li2O2 has also been demonstrated in the battery tests. Therefore, we consider the I3−/I− couple as an efficient charge transfer shuttle for transporting electrons between the photoelectrode and oxygen electrode: 2Dye++3I−→2Dye+I3− (that is, the dye reduction), I3−+Li2O2→3I−+2Li++O2 (that is, the Li2O2 oxidation).
The comparison of charging curves of a simple Li–O2 battery, a Li–O2 battery with the I3−/I− redox shuttle and a solar battery is shown in Fig. 4a,b, at different current densities. Apparently, the addition of I3−/I− redox shuttle has significantly reduced the charging voltage. It was further reduced with the incorporation of the photoelectrode: the solar battery charging voltage was recorded as 2.72 and 2.83 V at 0.016 and 0.032 mA cm−2, respectively. Considering the small energy difference between the TiO2 conduction band minimum (that is, ~+2.6 V) and quasi-Fermi level of electrons in the photoelectrode, we conclude that the results agree well with theoretical predictions. It is also noticeable that the charging voltage is lower than the O2/Li2O2 redox potential (that is, +2.96 V), which is thermodynamically impossible without the solar energy input. Once illumination was removed, the voltage increased immediately, indicating the photovoltage no longer existing to compensate the charging voltage of the solar battery. (Supplementary Fig. 6) Such a ‘light-response’ behaviour further supports our proposed working mechanism for this photoassisted charging process.
To evaluate the coulombic efficiency of this photoassisted charging process, the amount of Li2O2 on the oxygen electrode before and after the charging process was quantified. It is based on the fast and quantitative reaction: [TiO]2+SO42−+Li2O2+2H+→[TiO2]2+SO42−+2Li++H2O (ref. 30). The formed [TiO2]SO4 complex has a characteristic absorption peak at 405 nm. Therefore, the amount of Li2O2 involved in the reaction can be calculated based on the absorbance data. Experimentally, before the photoassisted charging process, 1.76 μmol Li2O2 was deposited on the oxygen electrode by a previous discharging process. After a charging process with 3.60 μmol electrons passing through, no detectable Li2O2 was left (Supplementary Fig. 7). The molar ratio of the oxidized Li2O2 to the electrons passed through is 1:2.05, matching well with the theoretical 1:2 mol ratio (Li2O2: e−). This result, together with the Raman spectra (Supplementary Fig. 8), proves that the Li2O2 has been efficiently oxidized by the I3− that generated on the photoelectrode.
The solar battery was rechargeable (Fig. 4c,d), however, with a performance decay as cycling went on. By checking the electrodes before and after the solar battery cycling via X-ray photoelectron microscopy (XPS), we attribute this to the gradual decomposition of N719 dye molecules under the strong oxidizing environment (Supplementary Figs 9–11). Hence, improving the stability of photoelectrode is essential. This issue can be solved by replacing the dye-sensitized TiO2 with other more stable photoelectrodes. In fact, our preliminary results of the haematite (that is, α-Fe2O3) photoelectrode based solar battery have shown that a single semiconductor–liquid junction photoelectrode also works efficiently and presents a remarkably better stability. A more detailed discussion of the haematite-based solar battery is presented in the Supplementary Information; (Supplementary Fig. 12). Besides solving the stability issue, the success on haematite-based solar battery further proves that the concept of photoassisted charging process has its generic impact on addressing the charging overpotential issue for Li–O2 batteries. More work on extending this concept to a large library of photoelectrode materials, such as haematite, doped TiO2, BiVO4 and so on, is currently undergoing.
Discussion
In conclusion, a photoassisted charging process for the non-aqueous Li–O2 battery has been demonstrated on a solar battery, which integrates a dye-sensitized TiO2 photoelectrode with the oxygen electrode via the linkage of the triiodide/iodide redox shuttle. On charging under illumination, the photoelectrode generates triiodide ions that subsequently diffuse to the oxygen electrode surface and oxidize Li2O2. The photovoltage generated on the TiO2 photoelectrode compensates the battery’s charging voltage. By utilizing solar energy, the device can be charged with a ‘negative’ overpotential, which is otherwise thermodynamically impossible. The proposed photoassisted charging process has been proved to be efficient. The performance of the solar battery will be further improved by optimizing the device configuration and exploring more stable photoelectrode materials. With this concept demonstrated, our work provides a novel and generic strategy to address issues of low energy efficiency and side reactions brought by the high charging overpotential for non-aqueous Li–O2 batteries. Furthermore, by using a redox shuttle to couple a photoelectrode and a battery into one device, this work also suggests a distinct approach for integrating solar cells and batteries, which represents an important direction for the future applications in solar energy conversion and storage.
Methods
Battery and solar battery assembly
All devices were assembled in an argon gas-filled glovebox. For Li–O2 batteries: the Li foil (0.75 mm thick, 99.9%, Alfa-Aser) was pretreated in 1 M lithium perchlorate (LiClO4, 99.99%, Sigma-Aldrich) of propylene carbonate (PC, 99.7%, Sigma-Aldrich) solution for three days before used as the anode9. A piece of commercial P50 carbon paper (0.25 mm thick, ~3.5 mg, AvCarb) and a piece of stainless steel gauze as the current collector (100-mesh, 0.25 mm thick, Fisher-Scientific) were stacked and used as the oxygen electrode. A piece of glassy fibre (0.6 mm thick, Whatman), saturated by the electrolyte as a solution of 0.1 M LiClO4 in DMSO (99.9%, Sigma-Aldrich), was used as the separator. For the batteries with I3−/I− redox shuttle, 0.1 M LiI (99.9%, Sigma-Aldrich) was added in the electrolyte. The batteries were assembled as Swagelok cells with an O-ring sealing. One atmosphere of high pure O2 was introduced to the oxygen electrode. For solar batteries, the anode and the oxygen electrode were the same as for Li–O2 batteries. For the photoelectode, TiO2 nanorods were hydrothermally grown on a piece of Ti gauze (80-mesh, Fisher-Scientific) based on a modified recipe31. Briefly, the Ti gauze (~10 mg) was first heated at 500 °C for 30 min in air to get a dense TiO2 coating layer. Then the gauze was placed in an aqueous solution (14 ml) of 225 μl titanium chloride (99.0%, Sigma-Aldrich) and 0.7 ml HCl (~37%, Fisher-Scientific) and hydrothermally heated at 170 °C for 10 h. After reaction, the TiO2 nanorod-decorated Ti gauze was washed with water, sintered at 450 °C for 30 min and then sensitized with N719 dye molecules (Solaronix). A piece of glassy fibre (0.35 mm thick, VWR) saturated with the 1.0 M LiClO4/0.1 M LiI/DMSO electrolyte was used to separate the oxygen electrode and photoelectrode. A fused silica window was O-ring sealed on the cell for allowing the illumination on the photoelectrode. For testing the solar cell, a sandwiched cell was made by a N719-sensitized TiO2 photoelectrode, a platinum-coated fluorine-doped tin oxide glass counter electrode and an electrolyte as 4.18 mM I2, 0.1 M LiI and 1 M LiClO4 in DMSO.
Electrochemical and photoelectrochemical cell testing
Li–O2 batteries were tested using a Maccor testing station (model: 4304), within a voltage range between 2.0 and 4.2 V (versus Li+/Li), with discharge and charge current densities varying from 0.016 to 0.79 mA cm−2. For solar batteries, the anode and the oxygen electrode were connected to the outside circuit for discharging, while for charging, the anode and the photoelectrode were connected to the outside circuit. A small-area class-B solar simulator (PV Measurements) was used for obtaining a 1.5 Sun AM 1.5 illumination for the solar battery and solar cell tests. CV studies for the I3−/I− redox couple were carried out on a Gamry potentiostat in a three-electrode configuration, with a glassy carbon working electrode (3 mm diameter), a platinum wire counter electrode and a Ag+/Ag non-aqueous reference electrode (10 mM AgNO3 in acetonitrile, from CHI, Inc.). The electrolyte was a solution of 1 M LiClO4 and 5 mM I2 in DMSO. Either argon or oxygen gas was saturated in the electrolyte during the CV tests. The scan rate was 10 mV s−1.
Characterizations
After battery and solar battery tests, the devices were disassembled in the glovebox. The oxygen electrodes were washed with 1,2-dimethoxyethane (Novolyte Tech) and the electrolyte was collected. The Raman spectra of discharged and charged carbon paper oxygen electrodes were collected on a microscope Raman spectrometer (inVia, Renishaw) with a 633-nm excitation wavelength (laser power: 6 mW), using an air-sensitive sample holder with a fused silica optical window. The attenuated total reflectance—Fourier transform infrared spectra of discharged and charged carbon paper oxygen electrodes were collected inside a glovebox on a Frontier FT-IR/FIR spectrometer (PerkinElmer) with a diamond window. The XPS analyses of the electrodes were performed on a Kratos Axis Ultra XPS with monochromatic Al X-ray source, at an operation voltage as 12 kV and a current as 10 mA. All the XPS samples were protected from the ambient atmosphere using an air-tight sample transfer module. The scanning electron microscopy (FEI/Philips Sirion Field Emission SEM) was used to obtain the morphology of the TiO2 nanostructure for the photoelectrode and the discharging product on the oxygen electrode. The X-ray diffraction instrument (Cu Kα, Rigaku, Inc.) was used to determine the crystal phase of TiO2 nanorods and the discharging product on the oxygen electrode. For the quantitative analysis of Li2O2 amount, a calibration curve was first made by reacting different amounts of lithium peroxide with 2 ml ~15% wt titanium(IV) oxysulfate (TiOSO4)/sulfuric acid (H2SO4) solution (99.99%, Sigma-Aldrich) (>100 magnitude excess to the Li2O2) and measuring the absorbance of formed [TiO2]2+ at 405 nm with ultraviolet-visible (UV–vis) spectra on a Lambda 950 UV/Vis/NR spectrometer (PerkinElmer). Then, two parallel solar batteries were assembled and discharged with the same capacity. One was disassembled in the glovebox and the carbon paper oxygen electrode was reacted with 2 ml TiOSO4/H2SO4 solution. The Li2O2 amount was determined by UV–vis spectra. The other solar battery was charged under illumination with 3.60 μmol electron passing through. After charging, the oxygen electrode was also reacted with 2 ml TiOSO4/H2SO4 solution and the Li2O2 amount left was determined by UV–vis spectra.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Yu, M. et al. Integrating a redox-coupled dye-sensitized photoelectrode into a lithium–oxygen battery for photoassisted charging. Nat. Commun. 5:5111 doi: 10.1038/ncomms6111 (2014).
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the funding support from the U.S. Department of Energy (Award no. DE-FG02-07ER46427). We acknowledge the generosity of Professor J.E. Goldberger for access to the Fourier transform infrared spectra spectrometer. We thank T.I. Draskovic, Z. Huang, X. Bi, K. Click, J. Xiong and Y. Ju for their valuable comments on the manuscript.
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Y.W. and M.Y. designed this study. M.Y. carried out the experiments. X.R. developed the Li–O2 battery set-up. L.M. performed the Raman and XPS analyses. All authors contributed to scientific discussions and the writing of the manuscript. Y.W. supervised the research project.
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Supplementary Figures 1-12, Supplementary Discussion and Supplementary References (PDF 1133 kb)
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Yu, M., Ren, X., Ma, L. et al. Integrating a redox-coupled dye-sensitized photoelectrode into a lithium–oxygen battery for photoassisted charging. Nat Commun 5, 5111 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6111
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms6111
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