Enabling 420 Wh kg -1 Stable Lithium Metal Pouch Cells by Lanthanum Doping.
Yanhua ZhangPeiyu ZhaoQiaona NieYong LiRui GuoYunfei HongJunkai DengJiangxuan SongPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
Li metal, a promising anode for high-energy-density rechargeable batteries, typically grows along the low-surface energy (110) plane in the plating process, resulting in uncontrollable dendrite growth and unstable interface. Herein, we report an unexpected Li growth behavior by lanthanum (La) doping: the preferred orientation turns to (200) from (110) plane, enabling a two-dimensional nuclei rather than usual one-dimensional nuclei upon Li deposition and thus forming a dense and dendrite-free morphology even at an ultra-high-areal-capacity of 10 mAh cm -2 . Noticeably, the La doping further decreases the reactivity of Li metal towards electrolytes, thereby establishing a stable interface. The dendrite-free, stable Li anode enables a high average Coulombic efficiency of 99.30% at 8 mAh cm -2 for asymmetric Li||LaF 3 -Cu cells. We further demonstrate a 3.1 Ah LaF 3 -Li||LiNi 0.8 Co 0.1 Mn 0.1 O 2 pouch cell at a high energy density (425.73 Wh kg -1 ) with impressive cycling stability (0.0989% decay/cycle) under lean electrolyte (1.76 g Ah -1 ) and high cathode loading (5.77 mAh cm -2 ) using this doped Li anode. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.