Thermal and Electrochemical Interface Compatibility of a Hydroborate Solid Electrolyte with 3 V-Class Cathodes for All-Solid-State Sodium Batteries.
Ryo AsakuraLéo DuchêneSeyedhosein PayandehDaniel RentschHans HagemannCorsin BattagliaArndt RemhofPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Thermal stability of solid electrolytes and their compatibility with battery electrodes are key factors to ensure stable cycling and high operational safety of all-solid-state batteries. Here, we study the compatibility of a hydroborate solid electrolyte Na4(B12H12)(B10H10) with 3 V-class cathode active materials: NaCrO2, NaMnO2, and NaFeO2. Among these layered sodium transition metal oxide cathodes, NaCrO2 shows the highest thermal compatibility in contact with the hydroborate solid electrolyte up to 525 °C in the discharged state. Furthermore, the electrolyte remains intact upon the internal thermal decomposition of the charged, that is, desodiated, cathode (Na0.5CrO2) above 250 °C, demonstrating the potential for highly safe hydroborate-based all-solid-state batteries with a wide operating temperature range. The experimentally determined onset temperatures of thermal decomposition of Na4(B12H12)(B10H10) in contact with 3 V-class cathodes surpass those of sulfide and selenide solid electrolytes, exceeding previous thermodynamic calculations. Our results also highlight the need to identify relevant decomposition pathways of hydroborates to enable more valid theoretical predictions.