Understanding Ion Pairing in High Salt Concentration Electrolytes using Classical Molecular Dynamics Simulations and its Implications for Nonaqueous Li-O$_2$ Batteries
Abhishek Khetan, Hamid Arjmandi, Vikram Pande, Heinz Pitsch, and Venkatasubramanian Viswanathan

TL;DR
This study uses classical molecular dynamics simulations to develop a new metric for ion pairing in high salt concentration electrolytes, providing insights for designing better electrolytes in Li-O$_2$ batteries.
Contribution
It introduces a novel continuous metric for ion pairing based on clustering, improving upon traditional coordination number methods and aligning well with experimental data.
Findings
New ion pairing metric correlates with experimental phase diagrams.
Ion pairing extent varies with salt and solvent types.
The metric enhances understanding of salt donicity measures.
Abstract
A precise understanding of solvation is essential for rational search and design of electrolytes that can meet performance demands in Li-ion and beyond Li-ion batteries. In the context of Li-O batteries, ion pairing is decisive in determining battery capacity via the solution mediated discharge mechanism without compromising heavily on electrolyte stability. We argue that models based on coordination numbers of the counterion in the first solvation shell are inadequate at describing the extent of ion pairing, especially at higher salt concentrations, and are often not consistent with experimental observations. In this study, we use classical molecular dynamics simulations for several salt anions (NO, BF, CFSO, (CFSO)N) and nonaqueous solvent (DMSO, DME, ACN, THF, DMA) combinations to improve the understanding of ion paring with the help of a new…
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