An Autonomous Laboratory for High-Throughput Air-Sensitive Material Discovery for All-Solid-State Batteries
Article 2025
Authors
YF
Yuxing Fei
BR
Bernardus Rendy
JW
Junhee Woo
Abstract
1 min read
Halide materials are promising superionic conductors for ASSBs but require moisture-free synthesis, limiting throughput due to manual operation in gloveboxes or dry rooms. An automated robotic system for handling air-sensitive materials in an inert atmosphere would greatly accelerate discovery. Here, we present a fully automated lab for high-throughput solid-state synthesis of halide conductors and other air-sensitive materials. Compact and modular, it operates entirely within an N 2 -protected double-station glovebox. The system includes five automated workstations for solid-state synthesis, with two six-axis robot arms seamlessly handling and transferring samples. By eliminating manual operation in confined spaces, it enhances efficiency and increases throughput. Many halide ionic conductors rely on rare-earth metals or mechanochemical treatments, raising costs and complicating scale-up. Developing compositions synthesizable via conventional heating with earth-abundant precursors is essential. Using our automated platform, we will systematically explore aliovalent substitution in close-packed halides, mapping synthesis accessibility by analyzing polymorph energetics, dopant effects, and heating conditions. This approach enables cost-effective, scalable ionic conductors, advancing solid-state battery technology.
Lauren N. Walters, Yuxing Fei, Bernardus Rendy, Xiaochen Yang, Mouhamad Diallo, KyuJung Jun, Grace Wei, Matthew J. McDermott, Andrea Giunto, Tara P. Mishra, Fengyu Shen, David Milsted, May Sabai Oo, Haegyeom Kim, Michael C. Tucker, Gerbrand Ceder
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