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Boosting Cycling Stability of Polymer Sodium Battery by "Rigid-Flexible" Coupled Interfacial Stress Modulation.

Jun PanShu-Mao XuTianxun CaiLulu HuXiangli CheWujie DongZhiyuan ShiAlok Kumar RaiNana WangFuqiang HuangShi Xue Dou
Published in: Nano letters (2023)
The discontinuous interfacial contact of solid-state polymer metal batteries is due to the stress changes in the electrode structure during cycling, resulting in poor ion transport. Herein, a rigid-flexible coupled interface stress modulation strategy is developed to solve the above issues, which is to design a rigid cathode with enhanced solid-solution behavior to guide the uniform distribution of ions and electric field. Meanwhile, the polymer components are optimized to build an organic-inorganic blended flexible interfacial film to relieve the change of interfacial stress and ensure rapid ion transmission. The fabricated battery comprising a Co-modulated P2-type layered cathode (Na 0.67 Mn 2/3 Co 1/3 O 2 ) and a high ion conductive polymer could deliver good cycling stability without distinct capacity fading (72.8 mAh g -1 over 350 cycles at 1 C), outperforming those without Co modulation or interfacial film construction. This work demonstrates a promising rigid-flexible coupled interfacial stress modulation strategy for polymer-metal batteries with excellent cycling stability.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • perovskite solar cells
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • electron transfer
  • high intensity
  • stress induced
  • room temperature
  • water soluble