Dual fluorine-free salt electrolytes for medium-to-high voltage lithium metal batteries
Journal article, 2026

Flame-resistant and fluorine-free electrolytes based on (combining) the salts lithium saccharinate (LiSac) and lithium bis(oxalato)borate (LiBOB) in a single solvent triethyl phosphate (TEP) solvent and vinylene carbonate (VC) additive are presented and evaluated for lithium metal battery application. The dual salt electrolyte, 1.5 M LiSac + 0.2 M LiBOB in TEP w. 2 % VC, clearly outperforms the single salt ones in terms of electrochemical performance, especially vs. LiNi0.8Mn0.1Co0.1O2 (NMC811) cathodes, properties that originate in a Li+ cation first solvation shell mainly composed of Sac and BOB anions, promoting formation of a mechanically stable, inorganic-rich cathode electrolyte interphase layer, which by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was revealed to comprise Li3N, BxOy and SO32− species. Overall, this also results in stable cycling, and a capacity retention of 86 % in both Li||LiFePO4 and Li||NMC811 cells after 500 cycles at 1C rate – hence offering an intrinsically safer electrolyte that also enables the use of both lithium metal anodes and medium-to-high-voltage cathodes.

Dual salt

Lithium saccharinate

Lithium bis(oxalato)borate

Transport properties

Fluorine-free electrolytes

Lithium metal battery

Author

Ashok Kushwaha

Luleå University of Technology

Sayantika Bhakta

Luleå University of Technology

Mukhtiar Ahmed

Luleå University of Technology

Andrei Filippov

Luleå University of Technology

Rong An

Nanjing University of Science and Technology

Patrik Johansson

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Physics

Uppsala University

Faiz Ullah Shah

Luleå University of Technology

Journal of Power Sources

0378-7753 (ISSN)

Vol. 667 239241

Biomass Derived Fluorine-Free Ionic Liquids Based Electrolytes Enabling Sustainable Batteries (BioSusBat)

Formas (2020-00969), 2021-01-01 -- 2024-12-31.

Next Generation Batteries

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2021-00613), 2021-12-01 -- 2032-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Materials Chemistry

Inorganic Chemistry

DOI

10.1016/j.jpowsour.2025.239241

More information

Latest update

1/19/2026