posted on 2024-05-03, 20:29authored byWeijie Chen, Dianwei Zhang, Hongwei Fu, Jinfan Li, Xinzhi Yu, Jiang Zhou, Bingan Lu
Ether-based electrolytes are among the most important
electrolytes
for potassium-ion batteries (PIBs) due to their low polarization voltage
and notable compatibility with potassium metal. However, their development
is hindered by the strong binding between K+ and ether
solvents, leading to [K+–solvent] cointercalation
on graphite anodes. Herein, we propose a partially and weakly solvating
electrolyte (PWSE) wherein the local solvation environment of the
conventional 1,2-dimethoxyethane (DME)-based electrolyte is efficiently
reconfigured by a partially and weakly solvating diethoxy methane
(DEM) cosolvent. For the PWSE in particular, DEM partially participates
in the solvation shell and weakens the chelation between K+ and DME, facilitating desolvation and suppressing cointercalation
behavior. Notably, the solvation structure of the DME-based electrolyte
is transformed into a more cation–anion–cluster-dominated
structure, consequently promoting thin and stable solid–electrolyte
interphase (SEI) generation. Benefiting from optimized solvation and
SEI generation, the PWSE enables a graphite electrode with reversible
K+ (de)intercalation (for over 1000 cycles) and K with
reversible plating/stripping (the K||Cu cell with an average Coulombic
efficiency of 98.72% over 400 cycles) and dendrite-free properties
(the K||K cell operates over 1800 h). We demonstrate that rational
PWSE design provides an approach to tailoring electrolytes toward
stable PIBs.