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2026-04-21
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Lithium-ion batteries – electrolytes – solid & semi-solid

SAMSUNG SDI CO LTD [KR] / WO 2026049212 A1

SOLID ELECTROLYTE LAYER AND SOLID SECONDARY BATTERY

A solid electrolyte layer for sulfide-based solid-state batteries incorporates an ionic plastic crystal that reduces its shear strength, measured via Surface And Interfacial Cutting Analysis (SAICAS), to 15–70 MPa, enabling stable cycling under low confining pressure (≤1.0 MPa).

The best-performing example combines Li6PS5Cl, PVDF binder, and 5-azoniaspiro[4,4]nonane 1,1,2,2,3,3-hexafluoropropane-1,3-disulfonimide (SBPCFSI, top Figure; with 10 mol% LiTFSI) at a 96.5 : 1 : 2.5 mass ratio. A slurry in xylene / isobutyl isobutyrate was blade-coated onto a PET sheet, dried (40°C, 12 h vacuum), and isostatically pressed (490 MPa).

Full cells with a Li2O-ZrO2-coated LiNi0.8Co0.15Mn0.05O2 positive electrode (impregnated with SBPCFSI in dichloromethane) and a plating-type Ag / carbon black negative electrode were cycled at 0.3 MPa confining pressure (25°C, 2.5–4.25 V). Example 1 exhibits a shear strength of 49.0 MPa, a 100-cycle capacity retention of 93.2%, and an average coulombic efficiency of 99.9%, compared to 88.8 MPa, 10.1%, and 96.8% for a Li6PS5Cl / PVDF layer without plastic crystal. Replacing SBPCFSI with succinonitrile + 5 mol% LiTFSI (Example 12) achieves comparable performance (49.7 MPa, 93.1%).

Top Figure: Structures of the SBPCFSI cation (5-azoniaspiro[4,4]nonane, SBP+) and anion (1,1,2,2,3,3-hexafluoropropane-1,3-disulfonimide, CFSI-).
Bottom Figure: 100-cycle capacity retention as a function of deemed shear strength for solid electrolyte layers of varying composition.
X-axis: 간주 전단강도 (MPa) = deemed shear strength (MPa); Y-axis: 100 사이클 용량 유지율 (%) = 100-cycle capacity retention (%)
실시예: Example
비교예: Comparative example

SAMSUNG SDI CO LTD [KR] / Patent Image
SAMSUNG SDI CO LTD [KR] / Patent Image
Takeaway: The ionic plastic crystal softens the sulfide electrolyte layer to enable intimate electrode contact at low stack pressure; excessive softening (Example 7, 17.8 MPa) compromises retention. Cycling at 0.3 MPa illustrates that sulfide cells can be operated at attractive stack pressures in combination with ionic plastic crystals, which is a positive indicator of interface resilience and might result in superior longevity upon further up-scaling.

Lithium-ion batteries – negative electrode (excluding Li metal electrodes)

SILA NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC [US] / US 20260074183 A1

FORMATION OF SILICON-CARBON COMPOSITE PARTICLES BY MAGNESIOTHERMIC REDUCTION OF SILICON OXIDE FOR LITHIUM-ION BATTERIES

Porous polydisperse silica (SiO2) microspheres (D50: 2–4 μm) served as feedstock for a silane-free route to silicon-carbon composite anode materials. The microspheres were dehydrated at 600°C for 1 h under N2.

Magnesiothermic reduction was carried out with a remote Mg source (≈150 μm Mg particles placed in a lower compartment and separated from the silica feedstock by a stainless steel mesh) at 600°C and ≈2 kPa for 8 h in Ar, forming intermediate particles comprising Si, MgO, and residual Mg2Si. A silicide-removal anneal at 650°C and ≈0.13 kPa for 6 h in Ar decomposed the Mg2Si.

A carbon termination layer was deposited by CVD (chemical vapor deposition) of propylene (33 vol% in N2) at 630°C for 1 h to passivate the freshly reduced Si surfaces. The MgO byproduct was selectively removed by stirring in 1 M HCl for 60 min, and a final carbon sealing layer was deposited by CVD of propylene (33 vol% in N2) at 630°C for 26 h to reduce the specific surface area.

In lithium-ion half-cells, the material exhibits a Si content of 65.2 mass%, a first cycle reversible capacity of 2,497 mAh/g, and a first cycle efficiency of 89.6%.

Figure: SEM (scanning electron microscope) micrograph at 50,000× magnification showing reduced Si particles dispersed within the carbon matrix of the silicon-carbon composite (scale bar: 200 nm).

SILA NANOTECHNOLOGIES INC [US] / Patent Image
Takeaway: Remote-source magnesiothermic reduction of porous silica, combined with pre-leach carbon termination that shields freshly reduced Si from re-oxidation during aqueous MgO removal, enables silane-free synthesis of silicon-carbon composite anode materials. A subsequent carbon sealing layer reduces the specific surface area to improve first-cycle efficiency. The route establishes a second development track alongside Sila's established monosilane CVD platform, leveraging abundant silica feedstock to decouple anode material scaling from monosilane precursor cost and supply.

Lithium-ion batteries – positive electrode

SK ON CO LTD [KR] / US 20260066271 A1

CATHODE ACTIVE MATERIAL FOR LITHIUM SECONDARY BATTERY, CATHODE FOR LITHIUM SECONDARY BATTERY INCLUDING THE SAME AND LITHIUM SECONDARY BATTERY

A Ni0.88Co0.09Mn0.03(OH)2 precursor was synthesized by co-precipitation (NiSO4, CoSO4, MnSO4; NaOH precipitant; transition metal : NaOH = 1 : 2 mol/mol). Mixing with LiOH in a dry high-speed mixer and two-step calcination (2°C/min to 850°C, 7 h; then 700°C, 12 h) yielded single-particle LiNi0.88Co0.09Mn0.03O2 (D50: 3 μm). Single-step calcination (2°C/min to 760°C, O2 at 10 mL/min) of the same precursor mixed with LiOH yielded secondary-particle LiNi0.88Co0.09Mn0.03O2 (D50: 13 μm).

LiMn0.60Fe0.40PO4 (irregularly-shaped secondary particles, D50: 1 μm) was synthesized by mixing FePO4, Mn2O3, LiH2PO4, Li2CO3, and an additive in deionized water, followed by sand grinding, spray drying, first calcination (2°C/min to 850°C, N2 at 10 mL/min), carbon source addition, grinding, spray drying, and second calcination (700°C).

The three fractions were dry-blended at 49 : 21 : 30 mass% (secondary-particle NMC : single-particle NMC : LMFP). In coin half-cells (4.3–2.0 V vs. Li+/Li, 25°C), the blend exhibits a volumetric energy density of 650 Wh/L (0.1 C) and a high-temperature cycle retention of 92.5% after 500 cycles (1 C / 1 C). In 30–50 Ah pouch full cells charged to 4.2 V and heated to 0 V in a 1000 L autoclave, the maximum autoclave pressure is 0.32 bar, as compared to 710 Wh/L, 75.5%, and 2.99 bar, respectively, for 100 mass% secondary-particle LiNi0.88Co0.10Mn0.02O2 without LMFP and without single-particle NMC.

Takeaway: Blending single-particle and secondary-particle high-Ni NMC with LMFP substantially improves high-temperature cycle retention and cell safety (measured by maximum autoclave pressure upon heating to 0 V) compared to secondary-particle NMC alone, with only a modest reduction in volumetric energy density.

Fuel cells (PEMFC / SOFC / PAFC / AEMFC) – electrochemically active materials

GM GLOBAL TECH OPERATIONS LLC [US] / US 20260074254 A1

FLUOROCARBON MOLECULAR ADDITIVES FOR PERFLUOROSULFONIC ACID BASED MEMBRANES

A PEM (proton exchange membrane) of a PFSA (perfluorosulfonic acid) ionomer containing an MNFB (methoxy-nonafluorobutane) coated additive was developed for PEMFC (proton exchange membrane fuel cell) and water electrolyzer applications, targeting improved proton conductivity at intermediate and high relative humidity.

The additive — a Pt/C recombination catalyst or an inert particle (silica, carbon black, graphene, or carbon nanotubes; 20 nm–1 µm; specific surface area 10–1000 m2/g) — is wet-ground in methoxy-nonafluorobutane (NOVEC 7100 Engineering Fluid, 3M; 1–72 h), optionally with an alcohol, to coat the particle surfaces with 0.1–5 mass% MNFB (preferably 1–2 mass% of the MNFB + additive). The coated additive is filtered, dried (50–100°C, 5–30 min), and combined with a PFSA ionomer solution at a 1 : 10 to 1 : 2000 PFSA ionomer : coated additive weight ratio (preferred 1 : 100 to 1 : 300).

The dispersion is cast onto an expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) support membrane (1–10 µm) and dried at 60–180°C for 10–60 min; an optional second PFSA layer with coated additive is applied on the opposite ePTFE face. The preferred PEM comprises a 4–15 µm first PFSA layer, a 1–10 µm ePTFE reinforcement, and a 2–6 µm second PFSA layer (total 6–30 µm), with coated additive areal density of 5–100 µg/cm2. Coated additive particles are dispersed throughout both PFSA layers, with the PFSA ionomer penetrating the ePTFE micropores (top Figure).

Four-probe EIS (electrochemical impedance spectroscopy) at 40–100% relative humidity shows that a PFSA membrane containing MNFB-coated Pt/C additive (A) achieves markedly higher in-plane proton conductivity than an otherwise identical membrane with unmodified Pt/C additive (B) at RH ≥ 50%, reaching ≈325 mS/cm at 100% RH versus ≈275 mS/cm for the unmodified reference (bottom Figure). Enhanced PFSA affinity for fluorocarbon molecules on the MNFB-coated additive surface is proposed to orient sulfonate ion clusters, improving proton transport.

A: PFSA membrane containing MNFB-coated Pt/C additive
B: PFSA membrane containing unmodified Pt/C additive (comparative)
Top Figure: Schematic cross-section of the PEM showing MNFB-coated additive particles (330) dispersed throughout the PFSA ionomer (302) first layer (322) and second layer (326), separated by an ePTFE reinforcement (312) whose micropores (310) are penetrated by ionomer; H+ transport direction indicated
Bottom Figure X-axis: Relative humidity (%)
Bottom Figure Y-axis: In-plane proton conductivity (mS/cm) measured by four-probe EIS

GM GLOBAL TECH OPERATIONS LLC [US] / Patent Image
GM GLOBAL TECH OPERATIONS LLC [US] / Patent Image
Takeaway: This work demonstrates that pre-coating a dispersed functional (Pt/C recombination catalyst) or inert additive with methoxy-nonafluorobutane before incorporation into a PFSA ionomer establishes PFSA–fluorocarbon affinity that reorients sulfonate ion clusters at the additive surface, increasing in-plane proton conductivity from ≈275 to ≈325 mS/cm at 100% RH compared to an unmodified Pt/C reference membrane, with the benefit sustained across RH ≥ 50%.

Other Categories (Excel lists are included for paid users)

  • Lithium metal batteries (excluding Li-S, Li-Air): Excel list
  • Lithium-air batteries: Excel list
  • Lithium-ion batteries – electrolytes – liquid: Excel list
  • Lithium-ion batteries – separators: Excel list
  • Lithium-sulfur batteries: Excel list
  • Na-ion batteries: Excel list

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