Conformational Engineering of Solvent Molecules for High-Voltage and Fast-Charging Lithium Metal Batteries

  • Borui Yang
  • , Yuankun Wang
  • , Ruixin Zheng
  • , Wei Yang
  • , Yuanjian Li
  • , Ting Li
  • , Kun Li
  • , Anjun Hu
  • , Jianping Long
  • , Shujiang Ding

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Scopus citations

Abstract

High-voltage and fast-charging lithium metal batteries (LMBs) are crucial for overcoming electric vehicle range and charging limitations. However, conventional carbonate electrolytes face intrinsic limitations in simultaneously achieving compatibility with high-voltage cathodes and lithium metal anodes. These limitations arise from sluggish Li+ transport kinetics and parasitic side reactions, both largely driven by excessive Li+ solvation energy inherent to carbonates. To address these challenges, we propose a conformational engineering strategy of fluorinated solvent molecules by developing a 2,2,3,3,4,4-hexafluoropentanedioic·anhydride (HFPA)-derived electrolyte (HFPE). The chair conformation of HFPA synergizes with its high F/C ratio to establish a low-polarity solvation environment, effectively reducing desolvation energy barriers. In addition, the HFPA-induced ligand preference for anion aggregation contributes to the formation of anion-rich dissolved sheaths while stabilizing the electrode–electrolyte interphases. The engineered HFPE demonstrates accelerated interfacial ion transport kinetics with an enhanced Li+ transference number of 0.64. When paired with LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 cathodes under stringent operating conditions (4.5 V cut-off voltage, 10 C-rate), HFPE-enabled cells exhibit exceptional cycling stability. Notably, industrial-scale 5.6 Ah lithium metal pouch cells employing HFPE maintain stable operation at 4.5 V, underscoring the practical viability of this conformation modulation approach. This work establishes a paradigm-shifting strategy for next-generation electrolyte design in practical high-energy-density LMBs.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202508486
JournalAngewandte Chemie - International Edition
Volume64
Issue number33
DOIs
StatePublished - 11 Aug 2025

Keywords

  • Anion aggregation
  • Electrolyte engineering
  • Lithium metal batteries
  • Molecular conformation
  • Solvation structure

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