Login / Signup

Solid electrolytes for solid-state Li/Na-metal batteries: inorganic, composite and polymeric materials.

Shufeng SongNing HuLi Lu
Published in: Chemical communications (Cambridge, England) (2022)
The thrust towards a higher energy density and safer alternative to traditional-liquid-electrolyte-based batteries has driven academic and industrial efforts in developing solid-state batteries and particularly solid-state Li/Na-metal batteries (SSLMBs/SSNMBs). Despite research on solid electrolytes seemingly being on a perpetual trajectory, there have been considerable critical issues to be overcome for solid electrolytes, including the insufficient ionic conductivity, low ion-transference number, and poor compatibility with lithium-metal anodes and intercalation cathodes. This feature article sets out efforts to regulate the cubic structure of garnet-type electrolytes, along with a discussion of the solid-solution synthetic approach to produce garnet-type and NASICON (sodium super ion conductor)-type electrolytes, followed by the synthetic strategy for sintering dense nano-grained NASICON-type electrolytes. Next, the mechanochemical synthetic approach and hybrid electrolyte design strategy to mitigate the issues associated with PEO-based composite electrolytes are presented. Finally, the advancement of promising polymeric electrolytes is discussed. We end the perspective with an opinion on the future research in this area.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • ion batteries
  • drug delivery
  • machine learning
  • ionic liquid
  • deep learning
  • cancer therapy
  • risk assessment
  • molecular dynamics
  • current status
  • quality improvement