Chemical Prelithiated 3D Lithiophilic/-Phobic Interlayer Enables Long-Term Li Plating/Stripping.
Sandro SchönerDana SchmidtXinchang ChenKrzysztof DzieciolRoland SchierholzPengfei CaoAhmad GhamloucheFabian JeschullAnna WindmüllerChih-Long TsaiXunfan LiaoHans KunglGui-Ming ZhongYiwang ChenHermann TempelShicheng YuRüdiger-A EichelPublished in: ACS nano (2024)
The up-to-date lifespan of zero-excess lithium (Li) metal batteries is limited to a few dozen cycles due to irreversible Li-ion loss caused by interfacial reactions during cycling. Herein, a chemical prelithiated composite interlayer, made of lithiophilic silver (Ag) and lithiophobic copper (Cu) in a 3D porous carbon fiber matrix, is applied on a planar Cu current collector to regulate Li plating and stripping and prevent undesired reactions. The Li-rich surface coating of lithium oxide (Li 2 O), lithium carboxylate (RCO 2 Li), lithium carbonates (ROCO 2 Li), and lithium hydride (LiH) is formed by soaking and directly heating the interlayer in n -butyllithium hexane solution. Although only a thin coating of ∼10 nm is created, it effectively regulates the ionic and electronic conductivity of the interlayer via these surface compounds and reduces defect sites by reactions of n -butyllithium with heteroatoms in the carbon fibers during formation. The spontaneously formed lithiophilic-lithiophobic gradient across individual carbon fiber provides homogeneous Li-ion deposition, preventing concentrated Li deposition. The porous structure of the composite interlayer eliminates the built-in stress upon Li deposition, and the anisotropically distributed carbon fibers enable uniform charge compensation. These features synergistically minimize the side reactions and compensate for Li-ion loss while cycling. The prepared zero-excess Li metal batteries could be cycled 300 times at 1.17 C with negligible capacity fading.