| Literature DB >> 32363768 |
Tao Deng1,2, Xiao Ji2, Yang Zhao3, Longsheng Cao2, Shuang Li4, Sooyeon Hwang4, Chao Luo5, Pengfei Wang2, Haiping Jia1, Xiulin Fan2, Xiaochuan Lu6, Dong Su4, Xueliang Sun3, Chunsheng Wang2, Ji-Guang Zhang1.
Abstract
Lithium (Li) metal is a promising candidate as the anode for high-energy-density solid-state batteries. However, interface issues, including large interfacial resistance and the generation of Li dendrites, have always frustrated the attempt to commercialize solid-state Li metal batteries (SSLBs). Here, it is reported that infusing garnet-type solid electrolytes (GSEs) with the air-stable electrolyte Li3 PO4 (LPO) dramatically reduces the interfacial resistance to ≈1 Ω cm2 and achieves a high critical current density of 2.2 mA cm-2 under ambient conditions due to the enhanced interfacial stability to the Li metal anode. The coated and infused LPO electrolytes not only improve the mechanical strength and Li-ion conductivity of the grain boundaries, but also form a stable Li-ion conductive but electron-insulating LPO-derived solid-electrolyte interphase between the Li metal and the GSE. Consequently, the growth of Li dendrites is eliminated and the direct reduction of the GSE by Li metal over a long cycle life is prevented. This interface engineering approach together with grain-boundary modification on GSEs represents a promising strategy to revolutionize the anode-electrolyte interface chemistry for SSLBs and provides a new design strategy for other types of solid-state batteries.Entities:
Keywords: garnet electrolytes; interfacial chemistry; lithium dendrites; solid-electrolyte interphase; solid-state batteries
Year: 2020 PMID: 32363768 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202000030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849