Plastic Monolithic Mixed-Conducting Interlayer for Dendrite-Free Solid-State Batteries.
Bing-Qing XiongShunqiang ChenXuan LuoQingshun NianXiaowen ZhanChengwei WangXiaodi RenPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2022)
Solid-state electrolytes (SSEs) hold a critical role in enabling high-energy-density and safe rechargeable batteries with Li metal anode. Unfortunately, nonuniform lithium deposition and dendrite penetration due to poor interfacial solid-solid contact are hindering their practical applications. Here, solid-state lithium naphthalenide (Li-Naph(s)) is introduced as a plastic monolithic mixed-conducting interlayer (PMMCI) between the garnet electrolyte and the Li anode via a facile cold process. The thin PMMCI shows a well-ordered layered crystalline structure with excellent mixed-conducting capability for both Li + (4.38 × 10 -3 S cm -1 ) and delocalized electrons (1.01 × 10 -3 S cm -1 ). In contrast to previous composite interlayers, this monolithic material enables an intrinsically homogenous electric field and Li + transport at the Li/garnet interface, thus significantly reducing the interfacial resistance and achieving uniform and dendrite-free Li anode plating/stripping. As a result, Li symmetric cells with the PMMCI-modified garnet electrolyte show highly stable cycling for 1200 h at 0.2 mA cm -2 and 500 h at a high current density of 1 mA cm -2 . The findings provide a new interface design strategy for solid-state batteries using monolithic mixed-conducting interlayers.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- ion batteries
- ionic liquid
- reduced graphene oxide
- liquid chromatography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- molecularly imprinted
- induced apoptosis
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gold nanoparticles
- computed tomography
- solid phase extraction
- mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- high intensity
- room temperature
- contrast enhanced
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- highly efficient
- pi k akt