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The chemical and electrochemical instabilities of LiPF 6 in carbonate electrolytes for Li-ion batteries were studied with online electrochemical mass spectrometry (OEMS). Decomposition of carbonate electrolytes based on LiPF 6 eventually results in the formation of POF 3 , which is readily detected and followed in situ during operation of Li-rich HE-NCM-based Li-ion cells. Electrode potentials above 4.2 V leads to carbonate solvent oxidation and presumably the formation of ROH species, which subsequently hydrolyze the LiPF 6 salt and initiate a thermally activated autocatalytic electrolyte decomposition cycle involving POF 3 as a reactive intermediate. Activation of the Li 2 MnO 3 domains of the Li-rich cathode contributes along with electrolyte and separator impurities to further POF 3 generation. Electrode potentials below 2.5 V vs. Li + /Li impede POF 3 formation and presumably also further electrolyte decomposition by scavenging reactive intermediate species. As a result, much less POF 3 gas was detected upon the 2 nd charge when using Li metal counter electrode, contrary to delithiated LiFePO 4 . In situ OEMS confirm that the parasitic reactions involving LiPF 6 constitute an intricate reaction scheme, but more importantly, provide further evidence about what the components of this scheme are and how these may interact with each other.
Guéguen et al. (Fri,) studied this question.