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Incorporating Sodium-Conductive Polymeric Interfacial Adhesive with Inorganic Solid-State Electrolytes for Quasi-Solid-State Sodium Metal Batteries.

Shihui GaoTingzhou YangJiabing LiuXinyu ZhangXiaoyi ZhangTai YangYongguang ZhangZhongwei Chen
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Inorganic solid-state electrolytes have attracted enormous attention due to their potential safety, increased energy density, and long cycle-life benefits. However, their application in solid-state batteries is limited by unstable electrode-electrolyte interface, poor point-to-point physical contact, and low utilization of metallic anodes. Herein, interfacial engineering based on sodium (Na)-conductive polymeric solid-state interfacial adhesive is studied to improve interface stability and optimize physical contacts, constructing a robust organic-rich solid electrolyte interphase layer to prevent dendrite-induced crack propagation and security issues. The interfacial adhesive strategy significantly increases the room-temperature critical current density of inorganic Na-ion conductors from 0.8 to 3.2 mA cm -2 and markedly enhances the cycling performance of solid-state batteries up to 500 cycles, respectively. Particularly, the Na 3 V 2 (PO 4 ) 3 -based full solid-state batteries with high cathode loading of 10.16 mg cm -2 also deliver an excellent cycling performance, further realizing the stable operation of solid-state laminated pouch cells. The research provides fundamental perspectives into the role of interfacial chemistry and takes the field a step closer to realizing practical solid-state batteries.
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