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An In Situ Generated Organic/Inorganic Hybrid SEI Layer Enables Li Metal Anodes with Dendrite Suppression Ability, High-Rate Capability, and Long-Life Stability.

Dengji HanZhongli WangShuiyin ChenJi ZhouShang ChenManyun WangDandan WuXiaodong MengChristopher W BielawskiJianxin Geng
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
High-quality solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layers can effectively suppress the growth of Li dendrites and improve the cycling stability of lithium metal batteries. Herein, 1-(6-bromohexanoyl)-3-butylurea is used to construct an organic/inorganic hybrid (designated as LiBr-HBU) SEI layer that features a uniform and compact structure. The LiBr-HBU SEI layer exhibits superior electrolyte wettability and air stability as well as strong attachment to Li foils. The LiBr-HBU SEI layer achieves a Li + conductivity of 2.75 × 10 -4 S cm -1 , which is ≈50-fold higher than the value measured for a native SEI layer. A Li//Li symmetric cell containing the LiBr-HBU SEI layer exhibits markedly improved cyclability when compared with the cell containing a native SEI layer, especially at a high current density (e.g., cycling life up to 1333 h at 15 mA cm -2 ). The LiBr-HBU SEI layer also improves the performance of lithium-sulfur cells, particularly the rate capability (548 mAh g -1 at 10 C) and cycling stability (513 mAh g -1 at 0.5 C after 500 cycles). The methodology described can be extended to the commercial processing of Li metal anodes as the artificial SEI layer also protects Li metal against corrosion.
Keyphrases
  • ion batteries
  • solid state
  • high intensity
  • stem cells