In Situ Analysis of Interfacial Morphological and Chemical Evolution in All-Solid-State Lithium-Metal Batteries.
Xu-Sheng ZhangJing WanZhen-Zhen ShenShuang-Yan LangSen XinRui WenYu-Guo GuoLi-Jun WanPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
In situ analysis of Li plating/stripping processes and evolution of solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) are critical for optimizing all-solid-state Li metal batteries (ASSLMB). However, the buried solid-solid interfaces present a challenge for detection which preclude the employment of multiple analysis techniques. Herein, by employing complementary in situ characterizations, morphological/chemical evolution, Li plating/stripping dynamics and SEI dynamics were directly detected. As a mixed ionic-electronic conducting interface, Li|Li 10 GeP 2 S 12 (LGPS) performed distinct interfacial morphological/chemical evolution and dynamics from ionic-conducting/electronic-isolating interface like Li|Li 3 PS 4 (LPS), which were revealed by combination of in situ atomic force microscopy and in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Though Li plating speed in LGPS was higher than LPS, speed of SSE decomposition was similar and ~85 % interfacial SSE turned into SEI during plating and remained unchanged in stripping. To leverage strengths of different SSEs, an LPS-LGPS-LPS sandwich electrolyte was developed, demonstrating enhanced ionic conductivity and improved interfacial stability with less SSE decomposition (25 %). Using in situ Kelvin probe force microscopy, Li-ion behavior at interface between different SSEs was effectively visualized, uncovering distribution of Li ions at LGPS|LPS interface under different potentials.