How individual vs shared coordination governs the degree of correlation in rotational vs residence times in a high-viscosity lithium electrolyte
Vinay Thakur, Prabhat Prakash, Raghavan Ranganathan

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how concentration and temperature affect the dynamics of lithium-ion electrolytes, revealing how individual and shared coordination influence correlation in rotational and residence times.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the coordination behavior and dynamics of Li$^+$ complexes with G4 and TFSI in glyme-based electrolytes, highlighting the impact of concentration on their stability and mobility.
Findings
Li$^+$ ions form stable [Li(G4)]$^+$ complexes with longer residence times at higher salt concentrations.
G4 forms polydentate complexes allowing rotation without breaking coordination, unlike TFSI.
Correlation between rotation and residence time varies depending on the type of coordination complex.
Abstract
Commercially used carbonate-based electrolytes in lithium-ion batteries are susceptible to many challenges, including flammability, volatility, and lower thermal stability. Solvated ionic liquids of LiTFSI salt (lithium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)-amide) and glyme-based solvents are potential alternative candidates for commonly used electrolytes. We perform classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations study the effect of concentration and temperature on the translational and rotational dynamics. The radial distribution function shows stronger coordination of Li ions with tetraglyme(G4), as shown in earlier studies, and forms a stable [Li(G4)] cation complex. The self-diffusion coefficients are lower than the values experimentally observed but show better improvement over other classical force fields. An increase in the salt concentrations leads to a higher viscosity of the…
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