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A soft co-crystalline solid electrolyte for lithium-ion batteries.

Prabhat PrakashBirane FallJordan AguirreLaura A SonnenbergParameswara Rao ChinnamSumanth ChereddyDmitriy A DikinArun VenkatnathanStephanie L WunderMichael J Zdilla
Published in: Nature materials (2023)
Alternative solid electrolytes are the next key step in advancing lithium batteries with better thermal and chemical stability. A soft solid electrolyte, (Adpn) 2 LiPF 6 (Adpn, adiponitrile), is synthesized and characterized that exhibits high thermal and electrochemical stability and good ionic conductivity, overcoming several limitations of conventional organic and ceramic materials. The surface of the electrolyte possesses a liquid nano-layer of Adpn that links grains for a facile ionic conduction without high pressure/temperature treatments. Further, the material can quickly self-heal if fractured and provides liquid-like conduction paths via the grain boundaries. A substantially high ion conductivity (~10 -4  S cm -1 ) and lithium-ion transference number (0.54) are obtained due to weak interactions between 'hard' (charge dense) Li + ions and the 'soft' (electronically polarizable) -C≡N group of Adpn. Molecular simulations predict that Li + ions migrate at the co-crystal grain boundaries with a (preferentially) lower activation energy E a and within the interstitial regions between the co-crystals with higher E a values, where the bulk conductivity is a smaller but extant contribution. These co-crystals establish a special concept of crystal design to increase the thermal stability of LiPF 6 by separating ions in the Adpn solvent matrix, and also exhibit a unique mechanism of ion conduction via low-resistance grain boundaries, which contrasts with ceramics or gel electrolytes.
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