Patent Publication Number: US-4550066-A

Title: Solid electrolyte

Description:
The present invention relates to a solid electrolyte and more particularly to a solid electrolyte for power cells. 
     Copper iodide is a good Cu +  ionic conductor (and electronic insulator) above 300° C. However, this compound is a less effective ionic conductor at lower temperatures, such as 200° C. 
     It is the object of the present invention to increase the ionic conductivity of copper iodide at various temperatures so as to make it useful as a solid electrolyte in power cells, especially power cells having a copper anode and a copper sulfide cathode. 
     The present invention satisfies this objective by providing a solid electrolyte for power cells comprising a solid solution of from about 70 mole percent to about 90 mole percent of copper iodide (CuI) and from about 30 mole percent to about 10 mole percent, respectively, of zinc iodide (ZnI 2 ). In a preferred embodiment of the invention the solid electrolyte comprises a solid solution of about 70 percent of copper iodide and about 30 mole percent of zinc iodide. In an especially preferred embodiment of the invention, the solid electrolyte comprises a solid solution of about 80 mole percent of copper iodide and about 20 mole percent of zinc iodide. 
    
    
     The solid electrolyte of the invention was synthesized by the following procedure. 
     Various predried (at 120° C. in argon or vacuum) and premixed (1/2 hour in Vibro mill) mole ratio quantities of CuI and ZnI 2  powders, corresponding to the desired composition, were placed in a 1 inch diameter silica test tube (for high ZnI 2  compositions a Pyrex tube was used). The tube was sealed using an oxygen-propane flame. The encapsulated mixture was loaded into an autoclave, the autoclave sealed and the system placed inside a tube furnace. The furnace was heated to 550° C., i.e., to above the melting point of the mixture, over a period of 2 to 3 hours and at frequent intervals the inside of the autoclave was pressurized with argon or nitrogen gas up to approximately 50-60 psi to prevent the silica capsule from exploding due to the iodine vapor pressure. The molten mixture was kept at constant temperature for 1 to 2 hours and cooled to room temperature over 5 hours. 
     The silica capsule containing the now solidified melt was then removed from the autoclave and transferred to a dry argon atmosphere glovebox. The silica capsule was opened and the solidified melt removed. All the iodide mixtures prepared were hygroscopic and were protected from the atomosphere at all times. 
     The solidified iodide melt was crushed to pass through a 20-mesh sieve, then further ground prior to pressing into 2.5 cm diameter, 1 to 3 mm thick discs for conductivity measurements. (The pressing was cold pressing at 8 tons per square inch for 1 hour or hot pressing at 200° C. at 5 tons per square inch for 1/2 hour.) 
     Total (electronic+ionic) conductivities (σ) were measured by a standard AC method (J. E. Bauerle, J. Phys. Chem. Solids 30, 2657 (1969) ). Electronic conductivities were measured separately by the Wagner polarization method (C. Wagner, Z. Elektrochem. 60, 4 (1956) ). Ionic conductivity set forth in Table I below was determined by subtracting the electronic conductivity from the total conductivity. 
     
                       TABLE I                                                     
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Composition - mole %                                                      
               Ionic Conductivity (ohm-cm).sup.-1                         
CuI       ZnI.sub.2                                                       
                   at 200° C.                                      
                                 at 300° C.                        
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100       --       5.25 × 10.sup.-5                                 
                                 1.43 × 10.sup.-3                   
90        10       4.90 × 10.sup.-5                                 
                                 1.54 × 10.sup.-3                   
80        20       3.55 × 10.sup.-4                                 
                                 1.11 × 10.sup.-2                   
70        30       1.55 × 10.sup.-4                                 
                                 4.37 × 10.sup.-3                   
67        33       3.39 × 10.sup.-6                                 
                                 3.92 × 10.sup.-4                   
60        40       2.40 × 10.sup.-5                                 
                                 1.33 × 10.sup.-3                   
50        50       1.56 × 10.sup.-5                                 
                                 8.06 × 10.sup.-4                   
40        60       1.82 × 10.sup.-5                                 
                                 6.10 × 10.sup.-4                   
30        70       4.01 × 10.sup.-7                                 
                                 3.63 × 10.sup.-4                   
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     The data in Table I above show that the CuI/ZnI 2  solid solution compositions of 70-90 mole percent CuI have unexpectedly high ionic conductivities which are usually greater than that of pure (100%) CuI at temperatures of 200° C. and higher. This is particularly true of the preferred 70 mole percent CuI solid solution composition and is more particularly true of the especially preferred 80 mole percent CuI solid solution composition. These findings are remarkable in view of the fact that ZnI 2  is not an ionic conductor, i.e., its ionic conductivity at 200° C. and at 300° C. is zero.