Xiang Chen1, Xiao-Ru Chen1, Ting-Zheng Hou2, Bo-Quan Li1, Xin-Bing Cheng1, Rui Zhang1, Qiang Zhang1. 1. Beijing Key Laboratory of Green Chemical Reaction Engineering and Technology, Department of Chemical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China. 2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Abstract
The uncontrollable growth of lithium (Li) dendrites seriously impedes practical applications of Li metal batteries. Various lithiophilic conductive frameworks, especially carbon hosts, are used to guide uniform Li nucleation and thus deliver a dendrite-free composite anode. However, the lithiophilic nature of these carbon hosts is poorly understood. Herein, the lithiophilicity chemistry of heteroatom-doped carbon is investigated through both first principles calculations and experimental verifications to guide uniform Li nucleation. The electronegativity, local dipole, and charge transfer are proposed to reveal the lithiophilicity of doping sites. Li bond chemistry further deepens the understanding of lithiophilicity. The O-doped and O/B-co-doped carbons exhibit the best lithiophilicity among single-doped and co-doped carbons, respectively. The excellent lithiophilicity achieved by O-doping carbon is further validated by Li nucleation overpotential measurement. This work uncovers the lithiophilicity chemistry of heteroatom-doped carbons and affords a mechanistic guidance to Li metal anode frameworks for safe rechargeable batteries.
The uncontrollable growth oflithium (Li) dendrites seriously impedes practical applications ofLi metal batteries. Various lithiophilicconductive frameworks, especially carbon hosts, are used to guide uniform Li nucleation and thus deliver a dendrite-free composite anode. However, the lithiophilic nature of these carbon hosts is poorly understood. Herein, the lithiophilicity chemistry of heteroatom-doped carbon is investigated through both first principles calculations and experimental verifications to guide uniform Li nucleation. The electronegativity, local dipole, and charge transfer are proposed to reveal the lithiophilicity of doping sites. Li bond chemistry further deepens the understanding of lithiophilicity. The O-doped and O/B-co-doped carbons exhibit the best lithiophilicity among single-doped and co-doped carbons, respectively. The excellent lithiophilicity achieved by O-dopingcarbon is further validated by Li nucleation overpotential measurement. This work uncovers the lithiophilicity chemistry of heteroatom-doped carbons and affords a mechanistic guidance to Li metal anode frameworks for safe rechargeable batteries.
With the ever-increasing energy demands from the current world, batteries with high energy densities are highly required. Lithium (Li) metal anodes, with an ultrahigh theoretical specificcapacity (3810 mAh g−1) and the lowest negative electrochemical potential (−3.040 V versus the standard hydrogen electrode), are strongly considered as the ultimate anode choice for Li batteries (–). However, the practical application ofLi metal anodes faces huge challenges, such as the growth of Li dendrites, the low Coulombic efficiency, and the infinite relative volume change duringcycling (). In particular, the uncontrollable growth of Li dendrites, which is considered the most fundamental issue facingLi metal anodes and has attracted much more attention, not only induces the “dead Li” with severe capacity loss but also can penetrate through the separator, inducing an internal short circuit and other potential safety hazards (, ).To address the challenging issue of Li dendrites, several strategies have been proposed, including the construction of three-dimensional (3D) conductive frameworks to guide a uniform Li deposition (–), the modification of electrolytes to stabilize the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) (–), and the introduction of high-modulus artificial SEI or solid-state electrolytes to prevent dendrite penetration (–). Among them, a desirable conductive framework is supposed to simultaneously resist the growth of Li dendrites and address the infinite relative volume change induced by the “hostless” Li plating/stripping at a practical areal capacity (>4 mAh cm−2). In particular, a variety ofcarbon materials, includingcarbon paper (), carbon nanotubes (), graphite/graphited carbon (, ), graphene (, ), and (reduced) graphene oxides (GOs) (, ), have been applied as the Li metal anode hosts. For instance, Guo and co-workers demonstrated that a 3D hollow carbonfiber container improves Li deposition behavior (). To modify the lithiophilicity of routine carbon materials, various doping strategies have been adopted. For instance, nitrogen-doped graphene has been demonstrated to have excellent lithiophilicity to guide uniform Li nucleation, achieving dendrite-free morphology and improved cyclingCoulombic efficiency (). Besides, Cui and co-workers () proposed a lithiophilic reduced GO (rGO) with a strong binding interaction toward Li and thus reduced the barrier of heterogenous Li nucleation.Although a variety of lithiophilic hosts has been proposed and indicate superior performance in suppressing dendritic Li growth, the exact working mechanism between Li and the lithiophilic hosts is tightly sealed and the lithiophilic nature of these carbon hosts is far from clear. If a fundamental understanding of the lithiophilicity chemistry is built, then the rational design of lithiophilicframeworks for dendrite-free Li metal anodes can be achieved.In this contribution, we probe the lithiophilicity chemistry of heteroatom-doped carbon to guide uniform heterogeneous Li nucleation through both first principles calculations and experimental verifications. Three key factors (electronegativity, local dipole, and charge transfer) are proposed to reveal the lithiophilicity origin of heteroatom-doping sites in carbon materials. O doping exhibits the best performance among all single-doping strategies, which was further validated by Li nucleation overpotential tests and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) characterizations. In addition, O/B co-doping is predicted to achieve better lithiophilicity than any single doping due to its large local dipole. Inspired from the Li bond theory, 7Li nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy can determine the lithiophilicity of host materials as the linear relationship between Li binding energy and 7Li chemical shift. This work deepens the understanding of lithiophilicity and affords fruitful insights into the rational design ofLi metal anode frameworks.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Modeling
In general, a Li ion in electrolyte is driven to a lithiophilic site on the anode framework surface by the electricforce, the Li ion concentration gradient, and the electrostatic interaction between the Li ion and the electronegative site in the framework. The third of these factors plays the major role when the Li ion arrives near the host and forms a chemical bond, and it can be precisely regulated by the surface chemistry of anode frameworks. Once adsorbed on the lithiophilic sites, Li ions are reduced to Li metal due to charge transfer (Fig. 1).
Fig. 1
Schematic representation of the Li nucleation on conductive frameworks.
Li nucleation is a very complicated process, controlled by both thermodynamic and kineticfactors. Thermodynamically speaking, nucleation is governed by the decrease in free energy due to phase transition and the increase in surface energy due to the creation of a new interface. The former is the nucleation drivingforce, while the later is the origin of nucleation barrier. According to the classical heterogeneous nucleation theory, the introduction of the framework will not change the critical nucleation radius (r*) but can lower the nucleation barrier and reduce the nucleation volume needed to reach r* (fig. S1). A larger binding energy can render a lower Li nucleation barrier and, thus, a smaller nucleation overpotential. Therefore, the binding energy between lithium and framework is suggested as the quantitative descriptor of lithiophilicity of anode framework.To understand the above Li nucleation process and thus unveil the lithiophilicity chemistry, first principles calculations were conducted first to investigate the interaction between Li and conductive carbonframeworks (fig. S2). For modeling, a series of heteroatom-doped graphene nanoribbons (GNRs) were constructed. Specifically, 20 species (pristine or heteroatom doped) were modeled with various dopant forms, including graphiticboron in the bulk phase (bgB), graphiticboron on the edge (egB), B–2C–O–type boron (oB), quaternary nitrogen in the bulk phase (bqN), quaternary nitrogen on the edge (eqN), pyrrolicnitrogen (rN), pyridinicnitrogen (pN), carboxylic group (aO), cyclicoxygen (cO), epoxy group (eO), hydroxyl group (hO), ketone group (kO), fluorine (F), chlorine (Cl), bromine (Br), iodine (I), phosphorus (P), sulfur (S), and sulfonyl group (oS) (Fig. 2, A and B, and figs. S3 to S7) (–). GNRs with defects consisting offive-carbon rings (C5), seven-carbon rings (C7), and five-carbon rings adjacent to seven-carbon rings (C5 + C7) on the edge were also considered (fig. S8). 2D single/multilayered graphene and graphite models were also considered.
Fig. 2
Modeling and the summary of Li binding energy.
(A) Modeling of heteroatom-doped carbons. (B) Prinstine GNR model. (C) Summary of calculated binding energy between heteroatom-doped carbon and a Li atom. The hydrogen, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, phosphorus, sulfur, chlorine, bromine, and iodine atoms are marked as white, green, gray, blue, red, cyan, wathet, yellow, bottle green, orange, and black, respectively.
Modeling and the summary of Li binding energy.
(A) Modeling of heteroatom-doped carbons. (B) Prinstine GNR model. (C) Summary ofcalculated binding energy between heteroatom-doped carbon and a Li atom. The hydrogen, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, phosphorus, sulfur, chlorine, bromine, and iodine atoms are marked as white, green, gray, blue, red, cyan, wathet, yellow, bottle green, orange, and black, respectively.
Binding energy and charge analyses
The binding energy, geometrical configuration, bond length, and charge density difference were explicitly examined (Figs. 2C, 3, and 4). The binding energies (Eb) are summarized in Fig. 2C and table S1. The adsorption of a Li atom is quite sensitive to dopant elements. GNRs with single doping of bgB, egB, pN, kO, or aO dopant exhibit a larger binding energy (rangingfrom −2.35 to −2.86 eV) than that of pristine GNR (−1.91 eV). The other O/N-doped GNRs except eO-GNR, such as bqN (Fig. 3E), eqN (Fig. 3F), and cO (Fig. 3J), exhibit a smaller binding energy than pristine GNR, which is induced by the odd electrons in these adsorption models. The eO-GNR interacts with a Li atom from the opposite direction of the functional groups with respect to the carbon plane (Fig. 3K), which is responsible for the small binding energy of eO-GNR toward a Li atom. Therefore, an appropriate introduction of heteroatom into carbon hosts is beneficial for Li heterogeneous nucleation, which is consistent with previous experimental results that N/O-doped carboncan significantly reduce the Li nucleation overpotential and thus render a uniform Li deposition at the lithiophilic sites (, ).
Fig. 3
The optimized interaction geometry of a Li atom and heteroatom-doped GNRs.
(A) Pristine, (B) bgB-, (C) egB-, (D) oB-, (E) bqN-, (F) eqN-, (G) rN-, (H) pN-, (I) aO-, (J) cO-, (K) eO-, (L) hO-, (M) kO-, (N) P-, (O) S-, (P) oS-, (Q) F-, (R) Cl-, (S) Br-, and (T) I-GNRs. The hydrogen, lithium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, phosphorus, sulfur, chlorine, bromine, and iodine atoms are marked as white, purple, green, gray, blue, red, cyan, wathet, yellow, bottle green, orange, and black, respectively. The distances between the Li atom and the adjacent doping atom are marked with black numbers (unit: Å).
Fig. 4
The Bader charge and differential charge analyses.
The Bader charge distribution before and after adsorption, and the corresponding differential charge density of Li adsorption site of (A to C) pN-, (D to F) aO-, and (G to I) F-GNRs, respectively. The black numbers are the Bader charge of the nearest atoms. The yellow and cyan surfaces correspond the charge gain and lost regions, respectively (isovalue, 0.0025). The hydrogen, lithium, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine atoms are marked as white, purple, gray, blue, red, and cyan, respectively.
The optimized interaction geometry of a Li atom and heteroatom-doped GNRs.
(A) Pristine, (B) bgB-, (C) egB-, (D) oB-, (E) bqN-, (F) eqN-, (G) rN-, (H) pN-, (I) aO-, (J) cO-, (K) eO-, (L) hO-, (M) kO-, (N) P-, (O) S-, (P) oS-, (Q) F-, (R) Cl-, (S) Br-, and (T) I-GNRs. The hydrogen, lithium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, phosphorus, sulfur, chlorine, bromine, and iodine atoms are marked as white, purple, green, gray, blue, red, cyan, wathet, yellow, bottle green, orange, and black, respectively. The distances between the Li atom and the adjacent doping atom are marked with black numbers (unit: Å).
The Bader charge and differential charge analyses.
The Bader charge distribution before and after adsorption, and the corresponding differential charge density of Li adsorption site of (A to C) pN-, (D to F) aO-, and (G to I) F-GNRs, respectively. The black numbers are the Bader charge of the nearest atoms. The yellow and cyan surfaces correspond the charge gain and lost regions, respectively (isovalue, 0.0025). The hydrogen, lithium, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine atoms are marked as white, purple, gray, blue, red, and cyan, respectively.Among various single-doping GNRs, aO-GNR (Fig. 3I) exhibits the largest binding energy toward a Li atom. Because of the higher electronegativity of the O atom (3.44) against the Li atom (0.98), the interaction between O and Li atoms is very analogous to the “Li bond” that is well explained by the Lewis acid-base theory (, ). The aO-GNR with an extra pair of electrons in the carboxylicfunctional group site is expected as an electron-rich donor that naturally acts as Lewis base sites to strongly absorb Lewis acidic Li ions through acid-base interactions. The length of the as-formed Li–O bond (1.79 Å; Fig. 3I) is even shorter than that in Li2Ocrystal (2.02 Å; fig. S9), indicating the strong interaction between the Li atom and aO-GNR.The dopant sites in kO-GNR (Fig. 3M) and pN-GNR (Fig. 3G) are also electronegative and interact with Li ions through a similar mechanism. However, the B atoms in bgB-GNR (Fig. 3B) and egB-GNR (Fig. 3C) are electropositive, and the adjacent carbon atoms are electronegative (fig. S10) due to the smaller electronegativity of the B atom (2.04) against the C atom (2.55). The electronegative carbon sites are preferable to pristine GNR (Fig. 3A), which results in enhanced Li adsorption on bgB-GNR and egB-GNR.In general, a larger binding energy toward precursor nuclei is advantageous to the heterogeneous nucleation process with a smaller surface tension against the substrate and, thus, a reduced nucleation energy barrier (). Therefore, carbon hosts with precise O, N, and B functional groups are expected to reduce the Li nucleation overpotential.On the contrary, other investigated single-doping elements (F, Cl, Br, I, and S) are unsatisfactory to afford adequate interactions toward a Li atom. Although the F atom has the highest electronegativity (3.98), its chemical state in GNR is very different from that of O and N doping sites. All these three atoms form σ-bonds with adjacent carbon and withdraw electrons through inductive effects. However, both O and N atoms participate in the delocalized π system of GNR that additionally contributes to their negative charge states. In the contrast, the filled p orbitals of the F atom form a p–π conjugation with the carbon plane that feedbacks electrons from the F atom to carbon (). As a result, the F atom is less electronegative than the N and O atoms, which is further validated by the Bader charge analysis (Fig. 4, A, D, and G). Therefore, F-GNR can only afford a weak interaction toward a Li ion (Fig. 3Q). The atomic radii of S, Cl, and Br atoms are much larger than that of a Li ion, which leads to the weak interaction between Li ions and S/Cl/Br-GNR (Fig. 3, O, R, and S). The situation of I-GNR is even worse, as lithiumcan destroy the structure of I-GNR because the I–C bond is very weak (Fig. 3T). A similar behavior can be found in eO-GNR species (fig. S11).To investigate the stability of these Li adatoms on doped carbon materials, the adsorption oflithium on Li (100) and (110) surfaces and the interaction between lithium and electrolyte solvents were further probed. The binding energies oflithium on Li (100) and (110) surfaces are −1.33 and −1.41 eV, respectively (table S2). These binding energies are much smaller than that of aO, pN, egB, and bgB doping but larger than that ofF, Cl, Br, I, and S doping. Additionally, the binding energies between lithium and a single electrolyte solvent are smaller than −1.0 eV (fig. S12), while the binding energy between lithium and multi-electrolyte solvents can reach to as large as −2.36 eV (fig. S13), which is larger than that of most doping sites. These results additionally enhance the important role of specific doping decoration on carbon materials, especially considering the stability of Li adatom in electrolyte conditions.
The principle of electronegativity and local dipole
Although the elemental electronegativity in combination with the Lewis acid-base theory can well explain why different heteroatoms enjoy varied lithiophilicity, it faces huge challenges when comparing different dopingfunctional groups. This is because the Li affinity is not only determined by the acid-base interaction but also influenced by other factors, such as the local geometrical and electronic structures of the dopant. Herein, the “local dipole,” which is defined as the dipoleformed by the doping atom and its adjacent carbon atom in GNR, is further considered. A strong local dipole not only renders a strong ion-dipoleforce toward Li ions but also delivers an induced dipole to the absorbed Li ions. Therefore, the local dipolecan further enhance the anchoring effects. With an overall consideration of elemental electronegativity and the as-defined local dipole (table S3), an implicit correlation between binding energy and “log (0.5 × electronegativity + local dipole)” was proposed (Fig. 5A). A dopant with a large electronegative doping atom and a strong local dipole absolutely delivers a large binding energy.
Fig. 5
The proposed principles for designing highly lithiophilic Li frameworks.
The correlation between Li atom binding energy and (A) log (0.5 × electronegativity + local dipole), (B) charge transfer, and (C) theoretical 7Li chemical shift.
The proposed principles for designing highly lithiophilic Li frameworks.
The correlation between Li atom binding energy and (A) log (0.5 × electronegativity + local dipole), (B) charge transfer, and (C) theoretical 7Li chemical shift.Inspired from the above proposed descriptor, a co-doping strategy is naturally considered as a large local dipole. Elements with a smaller electronegativity against carbon, such as boron, are supposed to induce a stronger local dipole with adjacent oxygen atom. Actually, oB-GNR has a very large local dipole of 3.21 e− Å (table S3) and the largest binding energy (−3.59 eV) among all GNRs herein (Figs. 2C and 3D). Besides, O–S/P co-doped GNRs (Figs. 2C and 3, N and P) also exhibit a large binding energy of −2.60 and −3.14 eV, respectively, which is larger than all single-doping GNR species except aO-GNR. Phosphate-functionalized rGO has been recently demonstrated to strongly bind with lithium and thus achieve low nucleation overpotentials by Archer and co-workers (), which can validate our proposed P/O the co-doping strategy. Consequently, all these results confirm the reliability of the co-doping strategy and thus validate the proposed log (0.5 × electronegativity + local dipole) principle.
The principle of charge transfer
On the basis of a fundamental understanding on the Li adsorption process, the charge transfer is further investigated through Bader charge and charge density difference analyses. As illustrated in Fig. 4 (B, E, and H), there is an evident charge transfer above 0.9 e− from Li to pN/aO-GNR, which is around 0.2 e− larger than that ofF-GNR. The transferred charge is delocalized in the conjugation structure. The charge density difference analysis further confirms that the charge transfer between Li and N/O atoms is obviously increased, indicating the formation of a strong Li-N/O interaction (Fig. 4, C and F). However, the charge gain between Li and F atoms is less palpable, further confirming the lessened charge transfer between Li and F-GNR (Fig. 4I). Therefore, an efficient charge transfer is necessary for a large binding energy.To determine the critical value of an efficient charge transfer, the correlation between binding energy and charge transfer is further probed. As indicated in Fig. 5B, when charge transfer increases up to 0.9 e−, a surge of the binding energy is sparked. Therefore, a critical charge transfer around 0.9 e− is determined. When charge transfer is below this critical value, the binding energy is absolutely small, indicating the critical role ofcharge transfer during heterogeneous Li nucleation.
Li bond and NMR
According to lithium bond chemistry, the chemical shift of 7Li NMR spectroscopy is suggested to serve as a quantitative descriptor of Li bond strength in Li-S batteries. Therefore, NMR spectroscopy calculation was conducted to probe the Li nucleation at the anode side by characterizing the formed Li bond when the solvated Li ions interact with lithiophilic sites during the initial plating process. To calculate the 7Li chemical shift, benzene, borabenzene, pyridine, pyrrole, benzoic acid, furan, phenol, quinomethan, thiophene, fluorobenzene, chlorobenzene, and bromobenzene molecules were selected as modeling molecules of the corresponding pristine, egB-, pN-, rN-, aO-, cO-, hO-, kO-, S-, F-, Cl-, and Br-GNRs, respectively (figs. S14 and S15). Although the calculated binding energies between these small molecules and the Li+–1,2-dimethoxyethanecomplex are different from that calculated on the basis of the GNR models due to change ofcalculation models and methods, the results mostly agree with each other.In the cluster calculations, the aO, pN, and kO exhibited the largest binding energy, followed by hO, cO, and rN. The F, Cl, Br, and S can only afford a very weak binding toward the Li ion, similar to G (benzene) (Fig. 5C). The only point where the cluster and periodic model diverge was the borabenzene- and boron-doped GNR species. The divergence is induced by the very different local chemical environments around B atoms in these two models (figs. S3 and S14A). Despite this disparity, when we correlated the binding energy and 7Li chemical shift collected from the cluster models, an excellent linear relationship was obtained (Fig. 5C). The 7Li chemical shift is a quantitative descriptor of the electron shielding effects on the 7Li nucleus. In detail, when the Li ions in G, B, and rN clusters interact with the overall quintuple/hexatomic ring, the electron shielding effects are thus enhanced, resulting in a more negative 7Li chemical shift. Consequently, as demonstrated by the cluster model calculations, 7Li chemical shift can be used to evaluate the interaction strength between Li ions and lithiophilic sites, affordingfruitful insights into the Li nucleation process.
Theoretically predicted rules for designing highly lithiophilic frameworks
According to the insights gained from Fig. 5 (A to C), we can propose several rules for creating a strong anchoring effect toward Li ions for doped carbons:(1) The doping atom should form an electronegative site (the doping atom or the adjacent carbon atom) as a Lewis base to interact with the Lewis acidic Li ions. A more negative charge state site is thus supposed to induce a stronger interaction toward Li ions.(2) The doping atom should form a strong local dipole to induce a strong ion-dipoleforce and generate an induced dipole around the absorbed Li ions to further enlarge the binding energy. A co-doping strategy (e.g., O-B/S/P co-doping) is inferred to deliver a larger binding energy than single-doping ofcarbons.(3) An efficient charge transfer above 0.9 e− is necessary to achieve a strong binding interaction. An electron-deficient site or a doping atom with large electronegativity is thus preferred.(4) The 7Li chemical shift can be used as another quantitative descriptor to judge the interaction strength between Li ions and carbon hosts. The NMR technique affords emergingchance for bridging the gap between theory and experiment to screen Li metal anode frameworks.On the basis of these considerations, O is better than B, N, and F as a single dopant to guide the uniform Li nucleation. The O–B/S/P co-dopingcan even achieve a stronger interaction toward Li ions than any single doping. These principles acquired from single-layered GNR models are also applicable to 2D multilayered graphene and graphite models (figs. S16 and 17).
Experimental verifications
To validate the reliability of the above predicted principles from first principles calculations, Li nucleation overpotential tests were used to evaluate the lithiophilicity on three kinds ofgraphene materials: pristine graphene (G), nitrogen-doped graphene (NG), and oxygen-containinggraphene (OG). According to the classical nucleation and growth theory, the drivingforce for the electrocrystallization process can be divided into the reaction potential, charge transfer overpotential, diffusion overpotential, and crystallization overpotential (–). Under a small nucleation current, the variation ofcharge transfer overpotential and diffusion overpotential could be ignored. Therefore, the as-obtained nucleation overpotential mainly changes with the crystallization overpotential, which is determined by the heterogeneous nucleation energy barrier (lithiophilicity) of the electrode surface. As shown in Fig. 6A, the G, NG, and OG samples have a nucleation overpotential of 22.5, 19.4, and 15.0 mV, respectively, illustrating that OG affords the lowest nucleation energy barrier and enjoys the best lithiophilicity. Consequently, the lithiophilicity of O-doped carbons predicted by the above-mentioned principles is validated.
Fig. 6
Li nucleation characterizations.
(A) Voltage-time curves during Li nucleation at 0.50 mA cm−2 on G, NG, and OG electrodes. (B) Relative Li nucleation overpotentials on G, NG, and OG electrodes at different current densities (0.05, 0.50, and 1.00 mA cm−2). The nucleation overpotential at 0.05 mA cm−2 is set to be 1. TEM images of Li deposits at the current density of 0.5 mA cm−2 at (C) 1 and (D) 30 min, respectively. a.u., arbitrary units.
Li nucleation characterizations.
(A) Voltage-time curves during Li nucleation at 0.50 mA cm−2 on G, NG, and OG electrodes. (B) Relative Li nucleation overpotentials on G, NG, and OG electrodes at different current densities (0.05, 0.50, and 1.00 mA cm−2). The nucleation overpotential at 0.05 mA cm−2 is set to be 1. TEM images of Li deposits at the current density of 0.5 mA cm−2 at (C) 1 and (D) 30 min, respectively. a.u., arbitrary units.When comparing the Li deposition at different current densities rangingfrom 0.05 to 1.00 mA cm−2, the nucleation overpotential ofNG and G enlarges 1.57 and 2.29 times, respectively, showing the significant influence ofcurrent density (Fig. 6B and fig. S18). However, OG exhibits a very steady nucleation overpotential due to its super lithiophilicity though the current density is increased by 20 times. Besides, the specific surface areas ofOG, NG, and G are 758, 1166, and 604 m2 g−1, respectively (figs. S19 and S20), indicating that the low overpotential ofOG does not originate from a large specific surface area to reduce local current density but its excellent lithiophilicity. To exclude the influence of different amounts of defects in G, NG, and OG (fig. S21), GNRs with C5, C7, and C5 + C7 defects, which can afford binding energies of −2.65, −1.89, and −1.96 eV, respectively, were also considered duringfirst principles calculations (figs. S22 and S23). The binding energy ofC5 is larger than that of pristine graphene (−1.91 eV) but smaller than that of aO (−2.85). Edge also has a certain impact on binding energy as lithium prefers to be adsorbed on the edge (−1.91 eV) of GNR rather than the bulk region (−1.66 eV). Besides, the binding energy of the pristine GNR (−1.91 eV) is larger than that of pristine 2D periodicgraphene (−1.15 eV). These results agree with recent report that edge-rich graphene nanosheets are beneficial for enhancing the surface electronegativity, attract Li ions, and promote the Li nucleation (). However, all these binding energies are smaller than that of aO (−2.86 eV), indicating O doping but not edge or defect plays the major role in reducing nucleation overpotential. Therefore, the lithiophilicity of the Li metal host is the most important factor in determining the Li nucleation overpotential, and designing a highly lithiophilicconductive framework is thus of great significance to practical Li metal anodes at large current densities.The Li nucleating and plating processes induced by the OG electrode were further illustrated by TEM characterizations (Fig. 6, C and D). The metallic Li deposited at a current density of 0.50 mA cm−2. After only 1.0 min of plating, uniform Li nucleation sites emerge on the surface ofOG due to its excellent lithiophilicity. After 30 min of plating, the nucleation sites grow from 6 to 30 nm but keep a uniform morphology, further confirming the important role of lithiophilicity in the Li nucleation process.
CONCLUSIONS
The lithiophilicity chemistry of heteroatom-doped carbons as heterogeneous Li deposition substrates was probed through first principles calculations and experimental characterizations. Three key factors account for the excellent lithiophilicity achieved by B, N, and O single-doping and O-B/S/P co-doping strategies, including the electronegativity, the local dipole, and the charge transfer. Inspired from lithium bond chemistry, the 7Li chemical shift is further validated as a quantitative descriptor to determine binding strength between solvated Li ions and carbons. On the basis of these principles, O doping and O/B co-doping are predicted to produce the best lithiophilicity among single-doped and co-doped carbons, respectively. The Li nucleation overpotential tests further demonstrate the excellent lithiophilicity induced by O dopingcarbonframeworks, which can induce a uniform Li deposition and thus dendrite-free metal anodes, confirmed by TEM images. This work reveals the lithiophilic nature of heteroatom-doped carbons and renders a rational strategy of designing lithiophilicframeworks for Li metal anodes with a low Li nucleation overpotential, dendrite-free morphology, and thus safe batteries with Li metal anodes.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Computational details
The periodic density functional theory calculation was conducted in the Vienna Ab initio Simulation package (), and the results were visualized in the Visualization for Electronic and Structural Analysis () program. The projector augmented wave () pseudopotentials and the Perdew-Burk-Ernzerhof generalized gradient approximation functional () were adopted. The energy cutoff was set to 520 eV (fig. S2A). The self-consistent field and geometry convergence tolerance were set to 1 × 10−5 and 1 × 10−4 eV, respectively.Considering the electrical conductivity and stability, zigzag rather than armchair GNR with a 20-Å vacuum layer in both the slip direction and normal direction was chosen as the basic model. The decorations with B, N, O, F, P, S, Cl, Br, and I dopants were further systematically investigated. A G-centered k-point grid through the Monkhorst-Pack method was set to 6 × 1 × 1 for GNR models (fig. S2B). The binding energy between GNRs and a Li atom was defined as followingwhere Etotal, EG, and ELi are the total energy of GNR bound with a Li atom, the pristine GNR, and a single Li atom, respectively.Cluster-based calculations were conducted using the Gaussian (G09) () suite of programs. Becke’s three-parameter hybrid method using the Lee-Yang-Parr correlation functional (B3LYP) was chosen in this study. Geometries were optimized and vibrational modes were calculated in G09 at a B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,p) level of theory. The 7Li chemical shifts were calculated usingfully optimized geometry with the integral equation formalism variant of the Polarizable Continuum Model as implemented with parameters of dielectricconstant ε = 7.2 and solvent radius of 4.1 Å, and referenced with respect to hydrated Li+, i.e., [Li (3H2O)]+, the same method adopted in our previous studies (, ).
Experimental details
The graphene (G) and oxygen-containinggraphene (OG) were obtained by thermal reduction ofGO, which was prepared by a modified Hummers method at 1000° and 250°C, respectively. The N-doped graphene (NG) here was obtained by treating the as-obtained graphene (G) with NH3flowing in a quartz tube.Two-electrode cells (Li versus G/NG/OG) were used with standard CR2025 coin-type cells (Shenzhen Kejingstar Technology Ltd.), which were assembled in an Ar-filled glove box with O2 and H2Ocontent below 1.0 ppm. The G/NG/OG powder and polyvinylidene fluoride binder (PVDF) (mass ratio of G/NG/OG:PVDF = 5:1) were stirred into a slurry in N-methylpyrrolidonefor 24 hours. The slurry was coated onto a Cufoil and dried in a vacuum drying oven at 60°Cfor 6.0 hours. The as-obtained G/NG/OG-coated Cufoil was punched into disks with a diameter of 13.0 mm as the working electrode. A 0.5-mm-thick Li metalfoil with a diameter of 16.0 mm (China Energy LithiumCo. Ltd.) was used as the counter electrode. A 1,3-dioxolane/1,2-dimethoxyethane (v/v = 1:1) (BeijingChemical Industry Group Co. Ltd.) electrolyte within 1.0 M LiTFSI salt was used in each coin cell.The coin cells were monitored in galvanostatic mode in Land CT2001 multichannel battery tester. In each galvanostaticcycle, the discharge time was fixed in the lithium plating process, and the charge time in the lithium stripping process was controlled by a cutoff voltage. The nucleation tests with a low current density of 0.5 mA cm−2 were performed on Solartron 1470E electrochemical workstation (Solartron Analytical, UK) for 2 hours.The morphology was characterized by a JEM 2010 (JEOL Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) TEM operated at 120.0 kV. N2 isotherms ofOG, NG, and G were obtained at −196°C (77 K) with an Autosorb-IQ2-MPC system (Quantachrome, USA). The specific surface area was determined by the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller method.
Authors: Mun Sek Kim; Seung Hun Lee; Min-Seop Kim; Ji-Hyun Ryu; Kwang-Ryeol Lee; Lynden A Archer; Won Il Cho Journal: Sci Adv Date: 2019-10-25 Impact factor: 14.136