SILVER-DOPED SULFUR CATHODE MATERIAL FOR RECHARGEABLE LITHIUM BATTERY
20230327108 · 2023-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01M4/5825
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/0525
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M4/58
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An active cathode material is doped with silver to effectively improve the cathode's electrical conductivity. The active material may be sulfur, and the silver may be in the form of silver, silver sulfide, or both. If desired, the cathode material includes a matrix of conductive nano-particles which include elemental sulfur, silver and or silver sulfide. The present disclosure may be applicable to other battery materials as well, such as, for example, lithium iron phosphate.
Claims
1. A secondary-battery cathode, wherein the cathode includes a doped material, and wherein the doped material comprises: a first amount of an active cathode material; and a second amount of silver, wherein the first amount is greater than the second amount.
2. The cathode of claim 1, wherein the active cathode material includes sulfur.
3. The cathode of claim 2, wherein the silver is in the form of metallic silver or silver sulfide.
4. The cathode of claim 1, wherein the active cathode material includes elemental sulfur, wherein the doped material includes a matrix of conductive nano-particles, and wherein the nano-particles include metallic silver or silver sulfide.
5. The cathode of claim 1, wherein the active cathode material includes a material other than sulfur.
6. The cathode of claim 5, wherein the material other than sulfur includes lithium iron phosphate.
7. A battery comprising: a cathode; an anode; an electrolyte located between the cathode and the anode; and a separator located within the electrolyte for permitting ions to be transported through the electrolyte to and from the cathode and the anode; and wherein the cathode includes an active cathode material and silver.
8. The battery of claim 7, wherein the active cathode material includes sulfur.
9. The battery of claim 8, wherein the silver is in the form of silver sulfide.
10. The battery of claim 7, wherein the active cathode material includes elemental sulfur, wherein the active material cathode includes a matrix of conductive nano-particles, and wherein the nano-particles include silver and/or silver sulfide.
11. The battery of claim 7, wherein the active cathode material includes a material other than sulfur.
12. The battery of claim 11, wherein the material other than sulfur includes lithium iron phosphate.
13. A method of making a cathode, the method comprising: producing a mixture by mixing elemental sulfur and a silver colloid; and subsequently, obtaining a silver-doped sulfur material from the mixture, wherein the silver-doped sulfur material includes silver and/or silver sulfide.
14. The method of claim 13, further comprising producing the silver colloid by mixing a colloidal silver solution and a reducing agent.
15. The method of claim 13, wherein the silver-doped sulfur material includes conductive nano-particles, and wherein the nano-particles include the silver and/or silver sulfide.
16. A method of making a secondary battery, the method comprising: providing a cathode, an anode, an electrolyte located between the cathode and the anode, and a separator located within the electrolyte; and making the cathode according to the method of claim 13.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012] Throughout the drawings, like elements are designated by like reference numerals and other characters. The drawings show non-limiting examples for purposes of illustration and explanation of the present disclosure, and are not drawn to scale.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] Referring now to the drawings, an example of a secondary battery 10 (
[0014] The enclosure 12 that is shown by way of example in the drawings may be made of a suitable, durable, non-conductive (electrically insulative) material. The conductive collectors 14, 16 may be made of one or more suitable, conductive materials, such as stainless steel, aluminum, nickel, copper, titanium, platinum, gold, silver, ruthenium, tantalum, niobium, hafnium, zirconium, vanadium, indium, cobalt, tungsten, tin, beryllium, and molybdenum. If desired, the cathode-side collector 14 may include a suitable aluminum foil, and the anode-side collector 16 may include a copper foil. The present disclosure should not be limited, however, to the configurations and materials shown in the drawings and referred to herein, except to the extent that such features are recited in the accompanying claims.
[0015] Referring now to
[0016] The anode 20 is also located within the enclosure 12 but contacts the anode-side conductive collector 16. The anode 20 includes one or more suitable active anode materials, such as lithium (Li), natural and artificial graphite, activated carbon, carbon black, conductive additives, lithium titanate (Li.sub.4Ti.sub.5O.sub.12, or LTO), surface-functionalized silicon, and powdered graphene.
[0017] The electrolyte 22 may include one or more suitable materials such as a non-aqueous liquid electrolyte, an ionic liquid, a solid polymer, and a glass-ceramic electrolyte. If desired, the electrolyte 22 may include salts, solvents, and additives. One or more of the salts may provide a pathway for lithium ions (Li.sup.+) 23 to move to and from the cathode 18 and the anode 20. The solvents may include one or more organic liquids for dissolving the salts, and the additives may be in small amounts for specific, desired purposes. In the illustrated example, the electrolyte 22 preferentially allows only the lithium ions 23 (not any electrons) to move to and from the electrodes 18, 20 within the battery 10.
[0018] The separator 24 is a semi-permeable barrier located between the battery electrodes 18, 20. The separator 24 may prevent the transmission of electrons through the battery 10, allowing only the lithium ions 23 to pass through internal microscopic openings within the separator 24. The configuration and materials of the separator 24 may be selected for desired physical and electrochemical characteristics. The separator 24 may include, for example, one or more synthetic resins such as polyethylene and polypropylene.
[0019] In operation, during a battery-charging process, a suitable charger (not illustrated in the drawings) is electrically connected to the conductive collectors 14, 16 and causes electrons (e.sup.−) to be conducted from the cathode 18, through the cathode-side collector 14, through one or more suitable wires (not illustrated) located outside of the battery 10, to the anode-side collector 16, and then to the anode 20. At the same time, lithium ions (Li.sup.+) 23 are transported from the cathode 18, through the electrolyte 22 and the separator 24, and to the anode 20, in the direction schematically indicated by a first arrow 25.
[0020] After the battery-charging process, a battery-discharging process may be performed by electrically connecting a suitable load (not illustrated) to the conductive collectors 14, 16, and causing electrons to be conducted from the anode 20, through the anode-side collector 16, through one or more suitable wires (not illustrated) located outside of the battery enclosure 12, to the cathode-side collector 14, and then to the cathode 18. During the battery-discharging process, lithium ions 23 are transported from the anode 20, through the electrolyte 22 and the separator 24, and to the cathode 18, in the direction schematically indicated by a second arrow 26. The battery-charging and battery-discharging processes may then be repeated, many times, in an alternating, cyclical manner.
[0021] Referring now to
[0022] Then, in step 112, elemental sulfur (S) 108 is added to, and mixed into, the silver colloid 106. Some of the sulfur 108 may react with the silver in the silver colloid 106 to form silver sulfide (Ag.sub.2S) and/or doped in a metallic form (Ag).
[0023] Then, in step 114, the silver-doped sulfur material 110 is allowed or caused to settle out from the mixture created in step 112. The silver-doped sulfur material 110 includes a matrix of elemental sulfur which has been treated with colloidal silver. Conductive nano-particles 120 (
[0024] The silver colloid 106 may be produced by any suitable method. According to one aspect of the present disclosure, the silver colloid 106 may be synthesized by chemical reduction of a silver salt with a reducing agent such as sodium borohydride, citrate, and ascorbate.
[0025] The cathode 18 illustrated in
[0026] The silver-doped sulfur material 110 advantageously has high electrical conductivity. There are many reasons to select sulfur as the cathode active material for a secondary battery. Those reasons include the high energy-density and relatively low cost of sulfur. However, the electrical conductivity of sulfur is extremely low. Indeed, sulfur is considered an electrical insulator. Carbon (C) may be added to sulfur as a conductive matrix to allow electron transfer between a cathode and an anode. However, the significant amount of carbon that may be required to sufficiently increase the conductivity of the carbon-sulfur (C—S) mixture leads to an increase in the thickness of the cathode. As the cathode thickness increases, the inability of ions to efficiently diffuse through the thick cathode becomes rate-limiting.
[0027] Thus, the battery 10 described by way of example herein, with the illustrated silver-doped sulfur material 110 in the cathode 18, can provide improved performance. The mass (size) of the cathode 18 can be kept small (not increased by the presence of carbon) while maintaining the desired conductivity of the cathode 18. Due to the high conductivity of silver sulfide and silver, a minimal amount of silver can be used to great advantageous effect to provide the electrical conductivity required to allow the desired electron transfer.
[0028] Indeed, silver is the most electrically conductive element. Moreover, silver can react with sulfur to form silver sulfide which is stable and will not transfer from the cathode 18 to the anode 20 during charging. Small amounts of silver may suffice to increase the conductivity of sulfur by orders of magnitude. The amount of silver that may be needed to achieve the desired conductivity in a cathode is on the order of parts per million, and therefore may have minimal impact on the cost of producing the battery 10, and also minimal impact on the functionally-required mass (size) of the cathode 18.
[0029] In many cases, unsatisfactory battery performance is due to low electrical conductivity of the cathode active material. Although conductive materials such as carbon can be added to sulfur to improve a cathode's conductivity, the attendant increase in weight and thickness of the cathode is disadvantageous. Due to its high conductivity, providing silver/silver sulfide within a matrix of the active cathode material can improve the conductivity of the cathode material to a significant extent without adversely affecting the thickness of the cathode. Unlike carbon, adding a small amount of silver/silver sulfide to a sulfur material for a cathode has little to no adverse impact on diffusion and ion transport.
[0030] Additionally, since silver sulfide is a highly stable compound, its presence in the cathode material may avoid at least some of the shuttling effects that are otherwise characteristic of lithium-sulfur secondary batteries.
[0031] The present disclosure is not limited to the examples described herein. Among other things, the present disclosure is not necessarily limited to the field of secondary batteries but may also relate to other types of batteries. In other words, except to the extent a feature is recited in the claims, the present disclosure relates to batteries and other devices in addition to the ones described herein.
[0032] Moreover, there may be other applications, including applications involving other active cathode materials, where silver can be used to improve the performance of secondary batteries. One such application relates to lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO.sub.4, or LFP) batteries which are a type of lithium-ion battery where the cathode includes lithium iron phosphate and the anode includes graphitic carbon and a metallic backing. As with sulfur, a drawback of lithium iron phosphate is its low electrical conductivity. Cathode conductivity may be improved by incorporating lithium iron phosphate into a matrix of carbon.
[0033] However, incorporating carbon into the lithium iron phosphate cathode increases the thickness of the cathode. As the thickness of the cathode increases, diffusion and transport of ions become limiting factors. Thus, according to the present disclosure, instead of carbon, a lithium iron phosphate cathode may include a small amount of silver to significantly reduce the mass (size) of the cathode while maintaining its conductivity. According to this aspect of the present disclosure, a cathode for a battery which is otherwise like the battery 10 illustrated in