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Interfacial Chemistry Enables Stable Cycling of All-Solid-State Li Metal Batteries at High Current Densities

Authors :
Nan Wu
John B. Goodenough
Yutao Li
Biyi Xu
Ruyi Fang
Kang Dong
Nicholas S. Grundish
Andrei Dolocan
Xinyu Li
Po-Hsiu Chien
Henghui Xu
Ingo Manke
Chao Yang
Source :
Journal of the American Chemical Society. 143:6542-6550
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021.

Abstract

The application of flexible, robust, and low-cost solid polymer electrolytes in next-generation all-solid-state lithium metal batteries has been hindered by the low room-temperature ionic conductivity of these electrolytes and the small critical current density of the batteries. Both issues stem from the low mobility of Li+ ions in the polymer and the fast lithium dendrite growth at the Li metal/electrolyte interface. Herein, Mg(ClO4)2 is demonstrated to be an effective additive in the poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-based composite electrolyte to regulate Li+ ion transport and manipulate the Li metal/electrolyte interfacial performance. By combining experimental and computational studies, we show that Mg2+ ions are immobile in a PEO host due to coordination with ether oxygen and anions of lithium salts, which enhances the mobility of Li+ ions; more importantly, an in-situ formed Li+-conducting Li2MgCl4/LiF interfacial layer homogenizes the Li+ flux during plating and increases the critical current density up to a record 2 mA cm-2. Each of these factors contributes to the assembly of competitive all-solid-state Li/Li, LiFePO4/Li, and LiNi0.8Mn0.1Co0.1O2/Li cells, demonstrating the importance of surface chemistry and interfacial engineering in the design of all-solid-state Li metal batteries for high-current-density applications.

Details

ISSN :
15205126 and 00027863
Volume :
143
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07eba9561515f41e9cf196fdc0bb1b54