Low-volatile binder enables thermal shock-resistant thin-film cathodes
for thermal batteries
Abstract
Manufacturing thin-film components is crucial for achieving
high-efficiency and high-power thermal batteries (TBs). However,
developing binders with low gas production at the operating temperature
range of TBs (400−550 °C) has proven to be a significant challenge. Here
we report the use of acrylic acid derivative terpolymer (LA136D) as a
low-volatile binder for thin-film cathode fabrication and studied the
chain scission and chemical bond-breaking mechanisms in pyrolysis. It is
shown LA136D defers to random-chain scission and cross-linking chain
scission mechanisms, which gifts it with a low proportion of volatile
products (ψ, ψ=39.2wt%) at even up to 550 °C, well below those of the
conventional PVDF (77.6wt%) and SBR (99.2wt%) binders. Surprisingly,
LA136D contributes to constructing a thermal shock-resistant cathode due
to the step-by-step bond-breaking process. This is beneficial for the
overall performance of TBs. In a 130 s pulse discharging test, the
thin-film cathodes exhibited a remarkable 440% reduction in
polarization and 300% enhancement in the utilization efficiency of
cathode materials, while with just a slight increase of 0.05 MPa in gas
pressure compared with traditional “thick-film” cathode. Our work
highlights the potential of LA136D as a low-volatile binder for
thin-film cathodes and shows the feasibility of manufacturing
high-efficiency and high-power TBs through polymer molecule engineering.