| Literature DB >> 34671167 |
Chunpeng Yang1, Qisheng Wu2, Weiqi Xie1, Xin Zhang1, Alexandra Brozena1, Jin Zheng3, Mounesha N Garaga4, Byung Hee Ko5, Yimin Mao1,6, Shuaiming He1, Yue Gao1, Pengbo Wang3, Madhusudan Tyagi1,6, Feng Jiao5, Robert Briber1, Paul Albertus7, Chunsheng Wang7, Steven Greenbaum4, Yan-Yan Hu3,8, Akira Isogai9, Martin Winter10, Kang Xu11, Yue Qi12, Liangbing Hu13,14.
Abstract
Although solid-state lithium (Li)-metal batteries promise both high energy density and safety, existing solid ion conductors fail to satisfy the rigorous requirements of battery operations. Inorganic ion conductors allow fast ion transport, but their rigid and brittle nature prevents good interfacial contact with electrodes. Conversely, polymer ion conductors that are Li-metal-stable usually provide better interfacial compatibility and mechanical tolerance, but typically suffer from inferior ionic conductivity owing to the coupling of the ion transport with the motion of the polymer chains1-3. Here we report a general strategy for achieving high-performance solid polymer ion conductors by engineering of molecular channels. Through the coordination of copper ions (Cu2+) with one-dimensional cellulose nanofibrils, we show that the opening of molecular channels within the normally ion-insulating cellulose enables rapid transport of Li+ ions along the polymer chains. In addition to high Li+ conductivity (1.5 × 10-3 siemens per centimetre at room temperature along the molecular chain direction), the Cu2+-coordinated cellulose ion conductor also exhibits a high transference number (0.78, compared with 0.2-0.5 in other polymers2) and a wide window of electrochemical stability (0-4.5 volts) that can accommodate both the Li-metal anode and high-voltage cathodes. This one-dimensional ion conductor also allows ion percolation in thick LiFePO4 solid-state cathodes for application in batteries with a high energy density. Furthermore, we have verified the universality of this molecular-channel engineering approach with other polymers and cations, achieving similarly high conductivities, with implications that could go beyond safe, high-performance solid-state batteries.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34671167 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03885-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962