1. Introduction
The sodium-ion battery technology is a promising alternative to the currently market-dominating lithium-ion one due to the much larger availability, the lower cost and the similar redox potential (2.71 V vs. H+/H2) of Na with respect to Li [
1,
2]. Analogously to the lithium ones, the sodium-ion devices use electrolytes based on hazardous and volatile organic solvents, thus representing severe safety issues especially in case of upscaled systems and electric/thermal abuse [
3]. In this scenario, ionic liquids (ILs), salts molten at room temperature or below, are appealing substitutes as safer (due to their exceptional flame retarding properties, negligible vapor pressure, thermal robustness) electrolytic solvents for replacing the organic ones [
4]. Ionic liquids, constituted by pyrrolidinium cations and per(fluoroalkylsulfonyl)imide anions, have been successfully investigated as electrolyte components for Na
+ battery systems [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9]. However, the physicochemical investigations were restricted to a very limited number of IL cations (mainly pyrrolidinium) and anions (mainly, bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide) and, therefore, only few ionic liquid types were studied until now for being addressed to sodium devices.
In the present paper, we show the results coming from investigations carried out on Na+-conducting electrolytes based on different IL families which, to our knowledge, have been never reported in the literature for applications in the sodium battery technology. For instance, ionic liquids, obtained combing 1-ethyl-3-methyl-imidazolium (EMI), trimethyl-butyl-ammonium (N1114), and N-alkyl-N-methyl-piperidinium (PIP1A) cations with bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (FSI), bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (TFSI) and (nonafluorobutylsulfonyl)(trifluoromethylsulfonyl) imide (IM14) anions, were synthesized and studied in the presence of the NaTFSI salt. The NaTFSI-IL sodium electrolytes were qualified in terms of ion transport properties and thermal stability.
2. Materials and Methods
The ionic liquids were synthesized and purified through an eco-friendly route detailly described elsewhere [
10,
11]. The reagents, namely
N-methyl-imidazole (Sigma-Aldrich, Saint Louis, MO, USA, 99%),
N-methyl-piperidine (Sigma-Aldrich, 99%), bromoethane (Sigma-Aldrich, 98%), 1-bromopropane (Sigma-Aldrich, 99%), 1-bromobutane (Sigma-Aldrich, 99%), sodium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (NaFSI, Solvionic, Toulouse, France, >99.9%), lithium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI, 3M, Saint Paul, MN, USA, >99.9%) and (nonafluorobutylsulfonyl)(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide acid (HIM
14, 3M, 60 wt.% in water solution) were used as received whereas the trimethylbutylammonium bromide (N
1114Br, Solvionic, 98%) precursor was purified through sorbents materials [
11], i.e., activated carbon (Sigma-Aldrich, Darco-G60) and acidic alumina (Sigma-Aldrich, Brockmann I). The latter were previously treated as reported in ref. [
11]. Deionized ultrapure water (Milli-Q, Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA) was used as the only processing solvent.
The 0.1NaTFSI-0.9IL (where 0.1 and 0.9 indicate the mole fractions) [
9] electrolytes were prepared by quickly dissolving (at 50 °C) the proper amount of the NaTFSI (Solvionic, >99.9%, previously vacuum dried overnight at 120 °C) salt in the ionic liquids.
The water content was determined (coulombometric titrations) by an automatic Karl Fischer titrator (Metrohm, Columbus, OH, USA) within a controlled atmosphere dry room (moisture level < 10 ppm). The content of halide and lithium was checked by X-ray fluorescence (Shimadzu energy dispersion EDX-720 spectrometer, Kyoto, Japan) and atomic absorption analysis (Varian SpetcrAA model 220 atomic absorption spectrometer, SpectraLab, Markham, ON, Canada), respectively.
The ionic conductivity of the NaTFSI-IL binary electrolytes was determined (through a conductivity meter Amel 160, AMEL, Milan, Italy) by loading (in the dry room) the samples in sealed, glass cells (Amel 192/K1, AMEL, cell constant equal to 1.00 ± 0.01 cm) equipped with two porous Pt electrodes. The measurements were carried out in the temperature range from −40 to 80 °C (Binder GmbH MK53 climatic test chamber, BINDER, Tuttlingen, Germany). To fully crystallize the IL electrolytes [
9], the cells were immersed in liquid nitrogen for about one minute and then immediately transferred in the climatic chamber at −40 °C. This route was repeated until the ionic liquid samples kept solid (at −40 °C.) After a storage period at −40 °C for at least 24 h, the conductivity of the sodium IL electrolytes was measured by running a heating scan at 1 °C h
−1.
The thermal stability of the NaTFSI-IL electrolytes was evaluated in argon atmosphere (100 mL min
−1 flow) through isothermal thermo-gravimetrical analysis (TGA) measurements at different temperature steps by using a Pyris Diamond analyzer (Perkin Elmer, Waltham, MA, USA). A very fast ramp (40 °C min
−1) was set up for adjusting the temperature step by step, i.e., the time associated to the temperature ramp between two consecutive (temperature) steps, differing in 25 °C, is extremely short (just a few seconds). This procedure allowed to give more reliable data with respect to those obtained from ramp temperature measurements [
9]. The samples (5–10 mg) were placed in sealed, pin-holed, aluminum pans. The TGA measurements have been repeated, on each IL electrolyte sample, at least twice to verify the reproducibility of the results.
3. Results and Discussion
The investigated ionic liquid electrolytes have exhibited a purity level above 99.5 wt.%; in particular, the content of lithium, halide and moisture is below 2 ppm.
The ion transport properties have been studied as a function of the temperature and the obtained results are reported in
Figure 1a (EMI-based electrolytes), 1b (N
11114-based) and 1c (PIP
1A-based), respectively. The conductivity–temperature diagram of the 0.1NaTFSI-0.9IL electrolytes containing TFSI-based ionic liquids (EMITFSI, N
1114TFSI, PIP
14TFSI) exhibits ion conduction values around 10
−7 S cm
−1 (i.e., typical of a crystalline solid state) [
4,
5,
9] from −40 °C up to the melting point, evidenced by a step increase (from two to three orders of magnitude) of the ionic conductivity. Conversely, the mixtures containing FSI-based ILs (EMIFSI, N
1114FSI) show, in the low-temperature range, an almost linear increase in conduction, likely attributable to an ion mobility gain due to solid–solid phase transitions occurring prior the melting [
12]. A similar trend is also observed for the 0.1NaTFSI-0.9PIP
13TFSI sample, in agreement with the conductivity results reported elsewhere for pure PIP
13TFSI [
13]. A two-orders-of-magnitude jump (not registered for the FSI-based electrolytes) is, however, detected around the melting temperature. A comparison among the conductivity–temperature plots evidences that solid–liquid transitions, recorded in the FSI-based electrolytes, occur at lower temperatures with respect to those observed in the TFSI ones. The melting point of an IL material is determined by the strength of its crystal lattice which, in turn, is controlled by competitive factors, such as surface charge density, intermolecular forces (Van der Waals) and molecular symmetry [
14], which have opposite effect. Therefore, the lower Van der Waals forces, due to the smaller steric hindrance of the FSI anion, might counterbalance the higher surface charge density (which, conversely, tends to increase the melting point), thus decreasing the melting temperature with respect to the TFSI electrolytes [
4].
No sudden conductivity raise is seen for the 0.1NaTFSI-0.9N
1114IM
14 electrolyte, indicating the absence of any solid–liquid phase transition in the investigated temperature range. This is likely attributable to the high asymmetry of the IM
14 anion with respect to FSI and TFSI (symmetrical), which strongly hinders the ion packing and, therefore, the IL crystallization. In the molten state, the 0.1NaTFSI-0.9IL samples display a VTF behavior, typical of the ionic liquid electrolytes [
4]. Further increases in temperature beyond that of the melting lead to a progressive raise in conductivity, due to the convective thermal motions within the ionic liquid media. The ionic conduction values, in the liquid state, progressively decrease with increasing the steric footprint of the anion in the following order: FSI > TFSI > IM
14. This behavior, reported in the literature for other IL electrolytes [
4], is due to the progressive increase in viscosity (linked to the size of the ions), which slows down the mobility of the ions within the IL material [
4].
In the molten state, a moderate decrease in conduction is observed for the 0.1NaTFSI-0.9PIP
14TFSI electrolyte with respect to 0.1NaTFSI-0.9PIP
13TFSI, attributable to the longer cation alkyl chain (n-butyl compared to n-propyl), which increases the steric bulk and, therefore, the viscosity of the piperidinium IL [
13]. Conversely, the increase in alkyl chain length leads to a greater asymmetry of the cation, hindering the formation of the crystalline lattice and, therefore, producing a decrease in the melting temperature of the ionic liquid, i.e., the PIP
14TFSI electrolyte exhibits a melting point of approximately 20 °C lower than that of the PIP
13TFSI one, once more in agreement with the results obtained for the pure ILs [
13].
The ionic conductivity data, determined at selected temperatures, of the 0.1NaTFSI-0.9IL sodium electrolytes are summarized in
Table 1. At −20 °C only the EMI-based samples exhibit conduction values (i.e., from 10
−4 to 10
−3 S cm
−1) of interest for practical devices, making these electrolytes appealing for low temperature applications. At 20 °C all investigated NaTFSI-IL electrolytes, with the exception of the NaTFSI-0N
1114IM
14 sample, largely overcome 10
−4 or 10
−3 S cm
−1. The EMI-based samples display higher conductivity values than those containing (N
1114)
+ and piperidinium cations, due to the lower viscous drag ascribable to the smaller size and planar configuration of the imidazolium cation [
4]. At 80 °C, the conductivity value of all sodium IL electrolytes largely exceeds 10
−3 S cm
−1; in particular, that of EMI- and FSI-based electrolytes widely overcomes 10
−2 S cm
−1.
The results, obtained from isothermal TGA measurements, are illustrated in
Figure 2a (samples containing the FSI anion) and
Figure 2b (TFSI and IM
14 anions), respectively. The time evolution of the sample temperature is highlighted by the stepped profiles (grey traces). All investigated samples show an initial loss in weight ranging from 0.4% to 0.6% due to the removal of absorbed H
2O (accentuated by the presence of the NaTFSI salt) during handling (sample loading into the pans).
The binary mixtures containing the FSI anion exhibit thermal stability up to 150 °C and reveal a progressive weight loss above this temperature (more accentuated in the passage from 175 to 200 °C). The EMIFSI electrolyte shows a lower degradation than that containing N
1114FSI, due to the higher stability of the (EMI)
+ cation compared to (N
1114)
+ [
4]. This relatively low thermal robustness, with respect to other IL families, is ascribable to the higher reactivity of the -SO2F group (in particular, the S-F bond) toward water and nucleophiles, especially at elevated temperatures [
15,
16,
17]. Among the electrolyte mixtures containing the TFSI and IM
14 anions (
Figure 2b), the EMITFSI sample displays the highest thermal stability: no weight loss is observed up to 275 °C whereas, after 2 h of heating at 300 °C, the residual mass of sample still exceeds 99%. The NaTFSI-N
1114TFSI and NaTFSI-N
1114IM
14 mixtures exhibit thermal stability up to 225 °C: above this temperature, however, a more pronounced degradation is seen for the N
1114IM
14-based electrolyte. This behavior might be attributed to a less difficult removal of the -CF
2CF
2CF
2CF
3 nonafluorobutyl chain (present in the anion IM
14 anion) compared to the -CF
3 trifluoromethyl one, even if this issue should be supported by further investigation. The piperidinium electrolyte samples (
Figure 2b) are thermally stable up to 250 (PIP
13TFSI) and 225 °C (PIP
14TFSI), respectively. A progressive weight loss is observed above these temperatures, more marked for the mixture containing PIP
14TFSI. Therefore, the n-propyl chain seems to confer, compared to the n-butyl one, a greater resistance to the thermal degradation. These results are in good agreement with previous data [
13], which show progressively decrease of the thermal stability with increasing the length of the main alkyl side chain of the piperidinium cation. To conclude, the results of the TGA measurements, summarized in
Table 1, have highlighted a different thermal stability of the investigated NaTFSI-IL electrolytes, according to the following sequences: EMI > PIP
13 > PIP
14 > N
1114 (cations); TFSI > IM
14 > FSI (anions).