Green Electrode Processing Enabled by Fluoro-Free Multifunctional Binders for Lithium-Ion Batteries

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-6-2025

Department

Biological Sciences

School

Biological, Environmental, and Earth Sciences

Abstract

The eco-friendly processing of conjugated polymer binder for lithium-ion batteries demands improved polymer solubility by introducing functional moieties, while this strategy will concurrently sacrifice polymer conductivity. Employing the polyfluorene-based binder poly(2,7-9,9 (di(oxy-2,5,8-trioxadecane))fluorene) (PFO), soluble in water-ethanol mixtures, a novel approach is presented to solve this trade-off, which features integration of aqueous solution processing with subsequent controlled thermal-induced cleavage of solubilizing side chains, to produce hierarchically ordered structures (HOS). The thermal processing can enhance the intermolecular π–π stacking of polyfluorene backbone for better electrochemical performance. Notably, HOS-PFO demonstrated a substantial 6–7 orders of magnitude enhancement in electronic conductivity, showcasing its potential as a functional binder for lithium-ion batteries. As an illustration, HOS-PFO protected SiOx anodes, utilizing in situ side chain decomposition of PFO surrounding SiOx particles after aqueous processing are fabricated. HOS-PFO contributed to the stable cycling and high-capacity retention of practical SiOx anodes (3.0 mAh cm−2), without the use of any conducting carbon additives or fluorinated electrolyte additives. It is proposed that this technique represents a universal approach for fabricating electrodes with conjugated polymer binders from aqueous solutions without compromising conductivity.

Publication Title

Advanced Science

Volume

12

Issue

17

Share

COinS