Subscriber access provided by UNIVERSITAT POLITÈCNICA DE VALÈNCIA
Article
An Electrochemical Cell for Selective Lithium Capture from Seawater Joo-Seong Kim, Yong-Hee Lee, Seungyeon Choi, Jaeho Shin, Hung-Cuong Dinh, and Jang Wook Choi Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b00032 • Publication Date (Web): 29 Apr 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 7, 2015
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
1
An Electrochemical Cell for Selective Lithium
2
Capture from Seawater Joo-Seong Kim,†,§ Yong-Hee Lee,†,§ Seungyeon Choi,† Jaeho Shin,‡ Hung-Cuong Dinh,∥,⊥ and Jang Wook Choi†,*
3 4 5
6
†
7
Graduate School of Energy, Environment, Water, and Sustainability (EEWS) and Center for Nature-inspired Technology (CNiT) in KAIST Institute NanoCentury, ‡
8
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering,
9
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), 291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu,
10
Daejeon 305-701, Republic of Korea ∥Laboratory
11
for Materials and Engineering of Fibre Optics, Institute of Materials Science
12
(IMS), Vietnamese Academy of Science and Technology (VAST), 18 Hoang Quoc Viet road,
13
Cau Giay District, Hanoi, Vietnam ⊥International
14 15
Center for Materials Nanoarchitectonics (WPI-MANA), National Institute for
Materials Science (NIMS), 1-1 Namiki, Tsukuba 305-0044, Japan
16 17 18 19
§
20
*Corresponding author: (e-mail)
[email protected], (phone) +82-42-350-1719, (fax)
21
+82-42-350-2248
22
These authors contributed equally.
1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
23
Abstract
24
Lithium (Li) is a core element of Li-ion batteries (LIBs). Recent developments in
25
mobile electronics such as smartphones and tablet PCs as well as advent of large-scale LIB
26
applications including electrical vehicles and grid-level energy storage systems have led to an
27
increase in demand for LIBs, giving rise to a concern on the availability and market price of
28
Li resources. However, the current Lime-Soda process that is responsible for greater than 80%
29
of worldwide Li resource supply is applicable only in certain regions on earth where the Li
30
concentrations are sufficiently high (salt lakes or salt pans). Moreover, not only is the process
31
time-consuming (12~18 months), but post-treatments are also required for the purification of
32
Li. Here, we have devised a location-independent electrochemical system for Li capture,
33
which can operate within a short time period (a few hours to days). By engaging olivine
34
LiFePO4 active electrode that improves interfacial properties via polydopamine coating, the
35
electrochemical cell achieves 4330 times amplification in Li/Na ion selectivity (Li/Na molar
36
ratio of initial solution = 0.01 and Li/Na molar ratio of final electrode = 43.3). In addition, the
37
electrochemical system engages an I-/I3- redox couple in the other electrode for balancing of
38
the redox states on both electrode sides and sustainable operations of the entire cell. Based on
39
the electrochemical results, key material and interfacial properties that affect the selectivity in
40
Li capture are identified.
41
42
2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 25
Page 3 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
43
Introduction
44
The development of rechargeable lithium ion batteries (LIBs) has brought the advent
45
of revolutionary changes in energy storage technology.1-3 A wide spectrum4-9 of electronics
46
ranging from mobile IT devices to electric vehicles utilize LIBs due to their relatively high
47
energy densities, resulting in a gradual increase for the demand of lithium (Li) resources.
48
However, Li, the core element of LIB, exists in a finite amount in nature and can only be
49
produced in limited regions in the world. Due to this maldistributed supply, the price for Li is
50
steadily rising.10 In these respects, the development of low-cost and rapid production
51
processes is desirable for stable Li supply to relevant industries.11,12 Currently, the Lime-Soda
52
evaporation process used in salt lakes or salt pans is responsible for the major portion of
53
worldwide Li supply (more than 80%). However, this process is not only time-consuming
54
(12~18 months), but also applicable solely to highly concentrated areas. Furthermore,
55
additional processes for removing residual ions are required before obtaining final products.13
56
To overcome these drawbacks, many researchers have developed alternative systems
57
for Li capture, including Al2O3 process, ion exchange methods, selective membrane
58
technology, etc.14-17 Nevertheless, many of these systems lack feasibility due to their low
59
ionic selectivity and limited working conditions (concentration, pH, etc.). The
60
electrochemical method has also lately received discernable attention targeting Li capture
61
from seawater due to its ability to capture and recover Li in a short time with relatively small
62
purification steps. It should be, however, noted that despite the massive quantity available
63
from the ocean, Li capture from seawater is extremely challenging because only a trace
64
amount of Li (~0.183 ppm) is present in the given volume and this condition would require a
65
high standard in the selectivity of Li over other cations, especially sodium (Na) ion (~10.8
66
ppm). For this reason, LIB cathode materials have been counted18,19 as unique candidates for 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
67
Li capture since their well-defined ionic channel dimensions could expel other cations with
68
larger diameters. In fact, lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4, or LFP) under the olivine
69
framework18,20-22 and lithium manganese oxide (LiMn2O4, or LMO)7,19,23,24 exhibited
70
promising Li capture capabilities. Nonetheless, these investigations leave a room for further
71
improvement, as a majority of them rely on expensive silver/silver chloride (Ag/AgCl)
72
counter electrodes that are difficult to avoid Ag+ dissolution. In the structural viewpoint,
73
LMO holds an advantage that Li is located at the tetrahedral sites with the limited space,
74
which is beneficial for the selectivity over other bigger cations. However, the operating
75
voltages of LMO make it hard to avoid water splitting completely, lowering the efficiency of
76
the overall system.
77
In the present investigation, we have built a highly selective and reversible Li capture
78
system by constructing an electrochemical cell that overcomes the existing limitations. As an
79
active electrode material, LFP was chosen due to its appropriate working potentials within
80
stable windows of water at all pHs25 as well as its structural advantages for the selectivity
81
over Na ion. Also, mussel-inspired polydopamine (pD) was used to coat LFP powder to
82
control interfacial energy penalty and thus the ionic selectivity. Moreover, a reversible I-/I3-
83
redox couple was engaged in the working electrode (WE) to facilitate the redox reaction in
84
the LFP counter electrode (CE) in a sustainable fashion. With this newly devised system, the
85
present study pays attention to the interfacial and electrode material properties that affect the
86
selective Li capture.
87
88
MATERIALS AND METHODS
89
Synthesis of c-FePO4. To synthesize pristine LFP, a hydrothermal method was used. 60 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 25
Page 5 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
90
mmol of lithium hydroxide (LiOH) was dissolved in 40 mL of ethylene glycol, and the
91
dispersion was stirred for 1 h. 20 mmol of FeSO4·7H2O was separately dissolved in 12 mL of
92
deionized water, and this solution was stirred for 15 min. These two solutions were mixed,
93
followed by introduction of 20 mmol of H3PO4. Next, 0.879 g of L-ascorbic acid and 3.0 g of
94
P123 were dissolved in 10 mL of deionized water, which was then added to the mixed
95
solution. The solution was briskly stirred for 2 h until gray suspension was made. The
96
suspension was transferred into a 100 ml Teflon-lined stainless-steel autoclave, and
97
hydrothermal reaction was carried out at 180 °C for 12 h. After the reaction, using
98
centrifugation, precipitant was collected and washed by co-solvents of water and ethanol (9:1
99
in volume) several times, which was followed by a drying step in a vacuum oven for 24 h.
100
For the conformal carbon coating on LFP powder, 3.5 g of LFP and 1.5 g of sucrose
101
were added to 40 mL of deionized water, followed by stirring for 30 min. The suspension was
102
then transferred into a 100 mL Teflon-lined autoclave, and hydrothermal reaction was carried
103
out at 180 °C for 12 h. After the reaction, precipitant was collected using centrifugation and
104
washed by deionized water several times. The precipitant was then dried inside an oven for
105
24 h. The dried powder was heated at 600 °C for 1 h in a nitrogen atmosphere.
106
For chemical extraction of Li from c-LFP, an oxidizing solution was prepared by
107
dissolving 1.7 g of nitronium tetrafluoroborate (NO2BF4) in 100 mL of acetonitrile. 1.0 g of
108
c-LFP powder was immersed into the solution and stirred for 24 h at room temperature. The
109
powder was then washed several times by acetonitrile and finally dried in a vacuum oven for
110
12 h.
111
Surface Modification of c-FePO4 with Polydopamine. The surface of c-FP was coated with
112
polydopamine by immersing the synthesized c-FP powder in a solution composed of 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
113
dopamine chloride with various relative contents of 5~50% compared to c-FP in weight. The
114
solution contained methanol and tris-buffer solution in a 1:1 volume ratio as a solvent while
115
the overall pH was fixed to 8.5. After overnight stirring, the pD-coated c-FP (denoted as pD-
116
c-FP) was washed several times with methanol and dried in a vacuum oven for 12 h. All
117
reagents were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and used without purification.
118
Reversible Electrochemical System. Performance tests of the reversible Li capture system
119
were conducted by using a home-built 3-electrode system. Iodine solution (0.5 M in
120
acetonitrile) and battery composite electrode were used as a working and a counter electrode,
121
respectively. Ag/AgCl electrode was chosen as a reference electrode (RE) and various
122
concentrations of brine were used as the electrolyte (Li: Na = 1: 100 molar ratio).
123
Cell Preparation. For preparation of the active electrodes, active material, binder, and
124
conductive agent were dispersed in N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP, Sigma-Aldrich) in a
125
weight ratio of 8:1:1. pD-c-FP and c-FP were used as active materials. Poly-vinylidene
126
fluoride (PVDF, Kynar) and denka black were used as a binder and a conductive agent,
127
respectively. The well-mixed slurries were cast onto SUS 316 plate using the doctor blade
128
technique and the cast electrodes were dried in a vacuum oven at 90 °C for 12 h.
129
Material Characterization. Contact angle measurements (Drop shape analysis system,
130
Phoenix 300, Korea) were carried out by dropping a deionized water droplet on the surface of
131
the electrode. The crystal structures of materials were characterized by X-ray diffraction
132
(RIGAKU, D/MAX-IIIC). Li/Na contents of the electrodes were measured by inductively
133
coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES).
134
Electrochemical Measurements. The electrochemical properties of the electrodes as LIB
135
cathodes were galvanostatically tested in a 3-electrode system in the potential range of 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 25
Page 7 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
136
0.3~0.6 V (vs. Ag/AgCl) using a battery cycler (Bio-Logic VSP). Platinum mesh and
137
Ag/AgCl were used as the counter and the reference electrodes, respectively. For cycling tests
138
of Li capture-recovery, the c-FP-based electrodes were tested in the same voltage window
139
under the constant current mode using the same equipment. The current density in both
140
measurements was 0.184 mA/g, and the mass of c-FP only was taken into account for the
141
calculation of the current density and specific capacity.
142
143
RESULTS
144
In order to fully utilize the attractive features of electrochemical approaches for Li
145
capture, it is crucial to grasp the inherent properties of seawater in actual oceanic
146
environments. In general, seawater has a pH in the range of 7.5~8.4 and contains various salts
147
that amount to 3.5%. These salts consist mainly of alkali metal elements (Group I) and
148
alkaline earth metal elements (Group II) as summarized in Supporting Table S1.26,27 Among
149
these, Li ranks the 6th in abundance, but this value is far smaller than that of Na, as the Li-to-
150
Na molar ratio is as small as ~1/18000. The inherently low concentration of Li requires a
151
preliminary step that gets rid of other ions as much as possible.
152
In this pre-treatment viewpoint, it is notable that the ionic radii of some elements
153
from the Group I and II are quite similar (see both columns in Supporting Table S2).28 Hence,
154
it is difficult to separate them based solely on their sizes. Nevertheless, an alternative method
155
that uses chemical precipitation and filtration allows one to selectively remove divalent ions.
156
In detail, separation of divalent ions is feasible through the use of differences in solubility
157
when combined with (bi)carbonate salts (Supporting Table S3). In the given processes, salts
158
with divalent ions bonded to bicarbonate are primarily precipitated. Also, by using the 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
159
hydration energy difference between the two groups of elements, monovalent ions can be
160
separated through a membrane (Table S4).29 As these preliminary steps have already been
161
established, our main task in the current investigation lies not with the separation of Li from
162
pristine seawater, but with the search for optimal conditions focusing on monovalent cations
163
through an electrochemical process. The present research was designed to confirm the
164
operational viability of our electrochemical cell as well as to identify critical parameters that
165
influence the selectivity in Li capture over Na ion.
166
In order to electrochemically capture Li in seawater conditions, the active material
167
for the electrode must have a stable redox potential window under the seawater conditions.
168
As can be seen in Figure 1a, seawater usually has a pH range of 7.5~8.4, and the operating
169
window of LFP fits in the stable window of water at this pH range. In particular, LFP
170
possesses 1-D diffusion channels that grant facile Li ion insertion into octahedral sites.20-22
171
Also, the absence of electrolysis makes LFP an attractive material for stable Li capture.
172
However, pristine LFP has an intrinsic low electric conductivity with slow kinetics for Li-ion
173
diffusion, resulting in rather inferior electrochemical activity. In addressing this inherent flaw,
174
LFP was coated with carbon (c-LFP) using sucrose as a carbon precursor, leading to
175
increased electrochemical activity. To serve as an active electrode material in the Li capture
176
system, Li was chemically extracted by using NO2BF4 to turn c-LFP to c-FP. c-FP still has
177
another issue of wettability in aqueous electrolytes due to the hydrophobic nature of the
178
carbon-coating layer. Thus, polydopamine (pD) with hydrophilic functional groups was used
179
to coat the prepared c-FP powder (pD-c-FP, Figure 1b right) to enhance its wettability in
180
aqueous environments. pD-c-FP turned out to offer improved electrochemical performance in
181
aqueous electrolytes as compared to the counterpart without the pD coating, as pD-c-FP
182
exhibited larger capacities, smaller overpotentials, and better cycling performance 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 25
Page 9 of 25
183
Environmental Science & Technology
(Supporting Figure S1).
184
Another trait that benefits LFP for this Li capture system is that its structure
185
promotes the selective capture of Li ions over Na ions. It can be seen that LFP has an olivine
186
structure (Figure 1c, left). After Li has been chemically removed, FP can still exist as an
187
olivine structure (Figure 1c, middle). In terms of volume change, the volume expansion
188
(17.8%) after Na ion insertion is significantly larger than that (7.5%) after Li ion insertion,
189
making the Li ion insertion energetically more favorable (Supporting Figure S2a). Moreover,
190
the diffusion energy of Na ions within the FP lattice is 119 meV higher than that of Li ions,30
191
indicating that Li ion diffusion within the olivine framework is more thermodynamically
192
favorable. But, upon the insertion of Na ions, the olivine structure of FP is preferably
193
transformed to a maricite structure (Figure 1c, right) because the maricite phase has a 16 meV
194
lower formation energy (Supporting Figure S2b).31 The maricite phase can be described with
195
the chemical formula FeNaPO4, a structure in which site exchange occurs with M1 sites for
196
alkali metal and M2 sites for iron, inevitably lowering the reversibility. Accordingly, the
197
maricite formation at local spots in each particle blocks Li ion diffusion channels, thereby
198
decreasing the capturing capacity (Supporting Figure S2c).32
199
For the practical viability of the devised system in this work, an electrochemical
200
system that affords reversibility without the loss of electrode material is also equally
201
important to the aforementioned effort with regard to the Li capturing electrode. To this end,
202
we have opted for the I-/I3- redox couple, whose reversibility has previously been confirmed
203
in dye-sensitized solar cells33 and Li-I batteries34, in the other electrode. Our reversible
204
electrochemical system is schematically described in Figure 1d. In this system, pD-c-FP or c-
205
FP, the I-/I3- redox couple, and Ag/AgCl constitute the CE, WE, and RE, respectively. The Li
206
capture process was operated under constant current between the WE and the CE (1.3 mA, 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
207
0.3C) for 5 h. The entire chemical reaction during the current supply is given as follows:
208
3I- + 2Li+ + 2FePO4 ↔ I3- + 2LiFePO4
(1)
209
When current was applied between the WE and the CE, I- was oxidized to I3- while FP was
210
reduced to yield LFP by reacting with Li ions, resulting in a capture of Li ions within the FP
211
lattice. The reversibility of this system was verified in Supporting Figure S3.
212
In order to elucidate the surface coating effect on the selectivity, the amount of pD
213
coating was varied (5, 10, 20% pD relative to c-FP in weight). To examine the selectivity, the
214
electrodes were analyzed after Li capture by using X-ray diffraction (XRD) (Figure 2a). In
215
the Li capture experiment, 0.005 M LiCl was added to a 0.5 M NaCl solution as the
216
electrolyte to make a Na/Li molar ratio 100. After the given current supply (1.3 mA, 5 h), the
217
5% pD-c-FP electrode showed XRD peaks that are well-aligned with those of pristine LFP,
218
implying the original FP is fully lithiated and its selectivity over Na ion is good. However,
219
with a 10% pD-c-FP electrode, XRD results exhibited peaks assigned to NaFePO4 (NFP),
220
indicating the presence of partial Na ion insertion into the electrode. Also, as the pD amount
221
was increased further, so did the intensity of NFP peaks in the XRD results, revealing
222
increased Na ion co-insertion into the electrode proportionally to the pD amount.
223
This pD concentration dependence can be explained through improved wettability
224
from pD coating. As displayed in Figures 3a-b and S4, the increased pD concentration indeed
225
enhances the wettability of the electrode surface. Although the small pD concentration would
226
result in uniform pD coating around c-FP particles because of the well-known coating
227
capability of dopamine polymerization process,35-37 the electrode composition including a
228
carbon conductive agent with a good volume occupation makes a difference in the wettability
229
of the electrodes with different pD concentrations. 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 10 of 25
Page 11 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
230
During the electrochemical cation capture, cations in the electrolyte pass through the
231
electrode-electrolyte interface and are inserted into the electrode. For this to occur, two types
232
of energy are required at the interface: dehydration energy that can strip water molecules
233
from the cations and insertion energy that allows the cations to insert into the electrode lattice.
234
In this respect, the enhanced wetting by the hydrophilic pD coating increases the ion
235
concentration at the electrode surface and thus the chance for the insertion, although the
236
dehydration energy is still required for the insertion of each Na ion. The effect of pD coating
237
can be mathematically interpreted by the Gibbs-Lippmann equation (2), an expression that
238
relates the properties of the electrode surface and the electrolyte:
239
−dγ = qdE- + Γ+dµ
(2)
240
This equation describes the rate of change in interface energy (dγ), in correlation with the
241
interface charge density (q) and differential potential of electrode (dE), and the excess
242
concentration (Γ+) of cation at the electrode surface and changes in electrochemical potential
243
(dµ). At a constant current condition that gives stable voltage (Figure S5), dE can be assumed
244
zero. Then, the above equation can be rearranged to the equation (3) in terms of excess
245
electrolyte concentration at the electrode surface:
246
Γା = − ቀ ቁ
பஓ
பஜ ா ష
(3)
247
This equation implies that at the given electric bias (fixed E), higher excess ionic
248
concentration allows the interfacial energy of the cation to respond more sensitively to the
249
electrochemical potential change. In the actual cell operation, this equation can be equally
250
applied in a way that the excess ion concentration at the electrode surface makes cation
251
insertion into the electrode more facile through its enhanced interfacial energy. Based on this
252
relation, the enhanced wettability has a critical effect on the Li/Na ion selectivity. As 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
253
portrayed in Figure 3e, upon the insertion, energy barriers along the ionic channels need to be
254
overcome for ionic diffusion inside the lattice. For this insertion, the Na ion case requires
255
further energy penalty as reflected by the larger volume expansion of the FP lattice compared
256
with that of the Li ion insertion. Na ions should also overcome higher energy barriers for
257
their inner diffusion. These two phenomena are described by energy gap for ‘phase transition
258
and ion diffusion’ in Figure 3e. Even in the existence of this structural preference toward the
259
Li ion diffusion, however, the increased (excess) ionic concentrations (both Li and Na ions,
260
the higher relative energy levels in the diagram) after the increased pD coating amount allow
261
Na ions to overcome the relative structural disadvantage and co-insert into the lattice based
262
on the equation (3), explaining the partial co-intercalation of Na ions in the case of 20% pD-
263
c-FP.
264
This interpretation was validated further when the NaCl concentration was varied. As
265
the Na ion concentration was increased from 0.5 M to 3.0 M while the Li/Na molar ratio was
266
fixed to 0.01, more serious Na ion co-intercalation was detected in XRD spectra (Figure 4).
267
Similar to Figure 3e, these phenomena can be understood based on the excess ion
268
concentration and the distinct diffusion barrier as well as the required energy for the phase
269
transition. Distinct dehydration energy between Na and Li ions may be taken into account in
270
a way that the Li ion requires higher dehydration energy due to its smaller ionic radius. As
271
graphically illustrated in Figure 5a, at all NaCl concentrations, the energy levels of Li ions in
272
the electrolyte are lower due to its lower concentrations. At the interface, once again, Na ions
273
spend less dehydration energy (orange arrows vs. green arrows of the Li ion case). After the
274
insertion, the higher inner diffusion barriers and the larger phase transformation energy make
275
Na ion diffusion less favorable (red arrows vs. yellow arrows of the Li ion case).
276
When a similar environment to seawater using 0.5 M NaCl with a fixed ratio of 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 25
Page 13 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
277
Na:Li = 100:1 mol% is considered (Figure 5b), the relatively less favorable Na ion diffusion
278
within the FP lattice originating from the diffusion barriers and the energy penalty for the
279
phase transition (purple arrow) leads to a better Li/Na ion selectivity. In this case, the
280
dehydration energy difference between both ions has a minor effect. By contrast, as the NaCl
281
concentration is increased (Figures 5c and d), the fouling effect of Na ions becomes serious
282
and the relative energy of the Na ions in the electrolyte rises, both of which make Na ion
283
insertion relatively more favorable and thus worsen the selectivity. This view is quite
284
consistent with the XRD results in Figure 4. Also, the dependence of fouling on the
285
concentration can be viewed in a way that the increase in the concentration would transit the
286
system more away from the equilibrium, leading to more dynamic fouling environments.
287
At the optimal interfacial condition of 5% pD coating, the resultant selectivity and
288
insertion efficiency of the electrochemical cell are remarkable. According to ICP analyses
289
after Li capture (Figure 6), c-FP and 5% pD-c-FP hold quite distinct selectivities of
290
Li/Na=2.64 and 43.3, reconfirming that the properly enhanced wetting facilitates Li ion
291
insertion while suppressing Na ion insertion. The selectivity of 43.3 represents 4330 times
292
amplification compared to the initial Li/Na ratio of 0.01. The insertion efficiency, defined as
293
Li ion occupancy per the available site in the lattice host, was evaluated by Li/Fe molar ratio.
294
While the Li/Fe ratio of c-FP is only 0.357, the value of 5% pD-c-FP reaches as high as 0.993,
295
indicating that almost all the available sites are indeed occupied by Li ion capture, and the
296
given active material is made a full use of. Notably, the selectivity obtained is quite superior
297
to those that have been previously reported.18
298
299
Discussion 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
300
In summary, we have devised an electrochemical system that grants a simple and fast
301
process for Li ion capture from brines. It was found that singular changes in either the
302
electrode surface or the electrolyte concentration do not provide the optimal condition in the
303
selectivity and efficiency. It is rather the interplay between these two variables (5% pD with
304
0.5 M NaCl solution) that results in the highest selectivity. Not only do these data serve as
305
crucial factors in designing systems and their corresponding parameters for Li capture, but
306
they can also be utilized as reference data for applications in an actual oceanic or high
307
concentration brine environments. Moreover, the devised system employs an electrode with a
308
reversible I-/I3- redox couple in the other electrode, making the overall system sustainable
309
without loss of the active electrode material. By integration with established pre-treatment
310
schemes, the current electrochemical approach should be applicable to Li capture from actual
311
seawater containing diverse ions with different contents.
14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 25
Page 15 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
312 313
Figure 1. The overall strategy for selective Li capture from the ocean. (a) Electrochemical
314
stability window of water at different pHs and operating windows of various LIB electrode
315
materials. (b) Surface modification of LiFePO4 (LFP) and FePO4 (FP). Synthesized pristine
316
LFP (left), carbon-coated FP (c-FP, middle), and polydopamine (pD)-coated c-FP (pD-c-FP,
317
right). (c) Structural preference of FP during Li or Na ion captures. Basic structures of LFP
318
(olivine), FP (olivine), and FeNaPO4 (maricite). (d) Cell configuration. Li ions are captured
319
(left) or released (right) depending the polarity of the applied bias.
15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
320 321
Figure 2. XRD patterns of c-FP and pD-c-FP electrodes after Li capture tests. Reference peak
322
locations for pristine LFP (green), FP (orange), and NFP (magenta) are presented in the
323
bottom.
324
16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 25
Page 17 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
325 326
Figure 3. The effect of polydopamine (pD) coating on interfacial properties of c-FP (pD-c-FP)
327
powder. Contact angle images of (a) 5% pD-c-FP and (b) 20% pD-c-FP electrodes. Schematic
328
illustration of the wettability effect on the ionic insertion in (c) 5% pD-c-FP and (d) 20% pD-
329
c-FP particles. (e) A graphical illustration of cation insertion process with different pD
330
coating concentrations.
17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
331 332
Figure 4. XRD patterns of 5% PD-c-FP electrodes after Li capture tests. The experiments
333
were conducted in various concentrations of electrolyte (0.5, 1, and 3 M of NaCl with a fixed
334
molar ratio of Li/Na=0.01).
335
18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 25
Page 19 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
336 337
Figure 5. The effect of electrolyte concentration for selective Li capture. (a) A schematic
338
illustration of cation insertion process in various concentrations of cations in the electrolyte.
339
Schematic images of the cation insertion process and the fouling effect of concentrated Na
340
ions in (b) seawater condition, (c) brine solution, and (d) highly concentrated brine solution.
341
19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
342 343
Figure 6. Quantitative molar ratios obtained by inductively coupled plasma (ICP)
344
measurements for various electrode conditions after Li capture.
345
20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 25
Page 21 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
346
ASSOCIATED CONTENTS
347
Supporting Information
348
Detailed seawater composition, ionic radii, solubility of (bi)carbonate compounds, and
349
hydration enthalpy, additional electrochemical data, phase transition of electrode materials,
350
reversible cell operation, and contact angle images. This material is available free of charge
351
via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org
352 353
AUTHOR INFORMATION
354
Corresponding Author
355
* E-mail:
[email protected] 356
Note
357
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
358 359
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
360
J.W.C. acknowledges the financial support by the National Research Foundation of Korea
361
(NRF) grant funded by the Korea government (MEST) (NRF-2012-R1A2A1A01011970,
362
2012M1A2A2026587, and NRF-2014R1A4A1003712) and Climate Change Research Hub
363
Project of the KAIST EEWS Research Center (N01150039).
364
21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
365
Reference
366 367
(1) Tarascon, J. M.; Armand, M. Issues and challenges facing rechargeable lithium batteries Nature 2001, 414, 359-367.
368 369
(2) Arico, A. S.; Bruce, P.; Scrosati, B.; Tarascon, J.-M.; van Schalkwijk, W. Nanostructured materials for advanced energy conversion and storage devices Nat. Mater. 2005, 4, 366-377.
370
(3) Armand, M.; Tarascon, J. M. Building better batteries Nature 2008, 451, 652-657.
371 372 373
(4) Chan, C. K.; Peng, H.; Liu, G.; McIlwrath, K.; Zhang, X. F.; Huggins, R. A.; Cui, Y. High-performance lithium battery anodes using silicon nanowires Nat. Nanotechnol. 2008, 3, 31-35.
374 375
(5) Goodenough, J. B.; Kim, Y. Challenges for Rechargeable Li Batteries† Chem. Mater. 2009, 22, 587-603.
376 377
(6) Dunn, B.; Kamath, H.; Tarascon, J.-M. Electrical Energy Storage for the Grid: A Battery of Choices Science 2011, 334, 928-935.
378 379 380
(7) Kim, J.-S.; Kim, K.; Cho, W.; Shin, W. H.; Kanno, R.; Choi, J. W. A Truncated Manganese Spinel Cathode for Excellent Power and Lifetime in Lithium-Ion Batteries Nano Lett. 2012, 12, 6358-6365.
381 382 383
(8) Lee, Y.-H.; Kim, J.-S.; Noh, J.; Lee, I.; Kim, H. J.; Choi, S.; Seo, J.; Jeon, S.; Kim, T.-S.; Lee, J.-Y.; Choi, J. W. Wearable Textile Battery Rechargeable by Solar Energy Nano Lett. 2013, 13, 5753-5761.
384 385 386
(9) Kim, J.-S.; Lee, Y.-H.; Lee, I.; Kim, T.-S.; Ryou, M.-H.; Choi, J. W. Large area multistacked lithium-ion batteries for flexible and rollable applications J. Mater. Chem. A 2014, 2, 10862-10868.
387
(10) Tarascon, J.-M. Is lithium the new gold? Nat. Chem. 2010, 2, 510-510.
388 389
(11) Hamzaoui, A. H.; M'Nif, A.; Hammi, H.; Rokbani, R. Contribution to the lithium recovery from brine Desalination 2003, 158, 221-224.
390 391 392
(12) Intaranont, N.; Garcia-Araez, N.; Hector, A. L.; Milton, J. A.; Owen, J. R. Selective lithium extraction from brines by chemical reaction with battery materials J. Mater. Chem. A 2014, 2, 6374-6377.
393 394
(13) Trócoli, R.; Battistel, A.; Mantia, F. L. Selectivity of a Lithium-Recovery Process Based on LiFePO4 Chem. Eur. J. 2014, 20, 9888-9891.
395 396 397
(14) Feng, Q.; Miyai, Y.; Kanoh, H.; Ooi, K. Li+ extraction/insertion with spinel-type lithium manganese oxides. Characterization of redox-type and ion-exchange-type sites Langmuir 1992, 8, 1861-1867.
398 399
(15) Chitrakar, R.; Kanoh, H.; Miyai, Y.; Ooi, K. Recovery of Lithium from Seawater Using Manganese Oxide Adsorbent (H1.6Mn1.6O4) Derived from Li1.6Mn1.6O4 Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. 22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 25
Page 23 of 25
Environmental Science & Technology
400
2001, 40, 2054-2058.
401 402 403
(16) Chung, K.-S.; Lee, J.-C.; Kim, W.-K.; Kim, S. B.; Cho, K. Y. Inorganic adsorbent containing polymeric membrane reservoir for the recovery of lithium from seawater J. Memb. Sci. 2008, 325, 503-508.
404 405 406
(17) Somrani, A.; Hamzaoui, A. H.; Pontie, M. Study on lithium separation from salt lake brines by nanofiltration (NF) and low pressure reverse osmosis (LPRO) Desalination 2013, 317, 184-192.
407 408
(18) Pasta, M.; Battistel, A.; La Mantia, F. Batteries for lithium recovery from brines Energy Environ. Sci. 2012, 5, 9487-9491.
409 410
(19) Lee, J.; Yu, S.-H.; Kim, C.; Sung, Y.-E.; Yoon, J. Highly selective lithium recovery from brine using a λ-MnO2-Ag battery Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2013, 15, 7690-7695.
411 412
(20) Chung, S.-Y.; Bloking, J. T.; Chiang, Y.-M. Electronically conductive phospho-olivines as lithium storage electrodes Nat. Mater. 2002, 1, 123-128.
413 414 415
(21) Dinh, H.-C.; Mho, S.-i.; Yeo, I.-H. Electrochemical Analysis of Conductive PolymerCoated LiFePO4 Nanocrystalline Cathodes with Controlled Morphology Electroanalysis 2011, 23, 2079-2086.
416 417 418
(22) Dinh, H.-C.; Mho, S.-i.; Kang, Y.; Yeo, I.-H. Large discharge capacities at high current rates for carbon-coated LiMnPO4 nanocrystalline cathodes J. Power Sources 2013, 244, 189195.
419 420 421
(23) Kim, D. K.; Muralidharan, P.; Lee, H.-W.; Ruffo, R.; Yang, Y.; Chan, C. K.; Peng, H.; Huggins, R. A.; Cui, Y. Spinel LiMn2O4 Nanorods as Lithium Ion Battery Cathodes Nano Lett. 2008, 8, 3948-3952.
422 423 424
(24) Hosono, E.; Kudo, T.; Honma, I.; Matsuda, H.; Zhou, H. Synthesis of Single Crystalline Spinel LiMn2O4 Nanowires for a Lithium Ion Battery with High Power Density Nano Lett. 2009, 9, 1045-1051.
425 426
(25) Ruffo, R.; Wessells, C.; Huggins, R. A.; Cui, Y. Electrochemical behavior of LiCoO2 as aqueous lithium-ion battery electrodes Electrochem. Commun. 2009, 11, 247-249.
427 428 429
(26) Millero, F. J.; Feistel, R.; Wright, D. G.; McDougall, T. J. The composition of Standard Seawater and the definition of the Reference-Composition Salinity Scale Deep-Sea Research 2008, 55, 50-72.
430 431
(27) Riley, J. P.; Tongudai, M. The lithium content of sea water Deep-Sea Research 1964, 11, 563-568.
432 433
(28) Shannon, R. Revised effective ionic radii and systematic studies of interatomic distances in halides and chalcogenides Acta Cryst. 1976, 32, 751-767.
434
(29) Smith, D. W. Ionic hydration enthalpies J. Chem. Educ. 1977, 54, 540.
435
(30) Ong, S. P.; Chevrier, V. L.; Hautier, G.; Jain, A.; Moore, C.; Kim, S.; Ma, X.; Ceder, G. 23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
436 437
Voltage, stability and diffusion barrier differences between sodium-ion and lithium-ion intercalation materials Energy Environ. Sci. 2011, 4, 3680-3688.
438 439
(31) Moreau, P.; Guyomard, D.; Gaubicher, J.; Boucher, F. Structure and Stability of Sodium Intercalated Phases in Olivine FePO4 Chem. Mater. 2010, 22, 4126-4128.
440 441
(32) Tripathi, R.; Wood, S. M.; Islam, M. S.; Nazar, L. F. Na-ion mobility in layered Na2FePO4F and olivine Na[Fe,Mn]PO4 Energy Environ. Sci. 2013, 6, 2257-2264.
442 443
(33) O'Regan, B.; Gratzel, M. A low-cost, high-efficiency solar cell based on dye-sensitized colloidal TiO2 films Nature 1991, 353, 737-740.
444 445 446
(34) Zhao, Y.; Wang, L.; Byon, H. R. High-performance rechargeable lithium-iodine batteries using triiodide/iodide redox couples in an aqueous cathode Nat. Commun. 2013, 4, 1896.
447 448
(35) Lee, H.; Dellatore, S. M.; Miller, W. M.; Messersmith, P. B. Mussel-Inspired Surface Chemistry for Multifunctional Coatings Science 2007, 318, 426-430.
449 450 451
(36) Ryou, M.-H.; Lee, Y. M.; Park, J.-K.; Choi, J. W. Mussel-Inspired PolydopamineTreated Polyethylene Separators for High-Power Li-Ion Batteries Adv. Mater. 2011, 23, 30663070.
452 453 454
(37) Ryou, M.-H.; Lee, D. J.; Lee, J.-N.; Lee, Y. M.; Park, J.-K.; Choi, J. W. Excellent Cycle Life of Lithium-Metal Anodes in Lithium-Ion Batteries with Mussel-Inspired PolydopamineCoated Separators Adv. Energy Mater. 2012, 2, 645-650.
455
24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 25
Page 25 of 25
456
Environmental Science & Technology
For Table of Contents Only
457
25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment