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Dendrite-Free Sodium Metal Anodes Enabled by a Sodium Benzenedithiolate-Rich Protection Layer.

Ming ZhuGuanyao WangXing LiuBingkun GuoGang XuZhongyi HuangMinghong WuHua-Kun LiuShi-Xue DouChao Wu
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Sodium metal is an ideal anode material for metal rechargeable batteries, owing to its high theoretical capacity (1166 mAh g-1 ), low cost, and earth-abundance. However, the dendritic growth upon Na plating, stemming from unstable solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) film, is a major and most notable problem. Here, a sodium benzenedithiolate (PhS2 Na2 )-rich protection layer is synthesized in situ on sodium by a facile method that effectively prevents dendrite growth in the carbonate electrolyte, leading to stabilized sodium metal electrodeposition for 400 cycles (800 h) of repeated plating/stripping at a current density of 1 mA cm-2 . The organic salt, PhS2 Na2 , is found to be a critical component in the protection layer. This finding opens up a new and promising avenue, based on organic sodium slats, to stabilize sodium metals with a protection layer.
Keyphrases
  • low cost
  • ion batteries
  • risk assessment
  • mouse model
  • quantum dots
  • health risk
  • heavy metals