Solid-State Electrocatalysis in Heteroatom-Doped Alloy Anode Enables Ultrafast Charge Lithium-Ion Batteries.
En ZhouHongchang JinHaifeng LvYuansen XieYuhao LuYing-Rui LuTing-Shan ChanChao WangWensheng YanJing ZhangHengxing JiXiao-Jun WuXiangfeng DuanPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Electrocatalysis is generally confined to dynamic liquid-solid and gas-solid interfaces and is rarely applicable in solid-state reactions. Here, we report a paradigm shift strategy to exploit electrocatalysis to accelerate solid-state reactions in the context of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). We employ heteroatom doping, specifically boron for silicon and sulfur for phosphorus, to catalyze electrochemical Li-alloying reactions in solid-state electrode materials. The preferential cleavage of polar dopant-host chemical bonds upon lithiation triggers chemical bond breaking of the host material. This solid-state catalysis, distinct from liquid and gas phases, requires a critical doping concentration for optimal performance. Beyond a critical concentration of ∼1 atom %, boron and sulfur doping drastically reduces activation energies and accelerates redox kinetics during lithiation/delithiation processes, leading to markedly enhanced rate performance in boron-doped silicon and sulfur-doped black/red phosphorus anode. Notably, a sulfur-doped black phosphorus anode coupled with a lithium cobalt oxide cathode achieves an ultrafast-charging battery, recharging 80% energy of a battery in 302 Wh kg -1 in 9 min, surpassing the thus far reported LIBs.