Coordination-Assisted Precise Construction of Metal Oxide Nanofilms for High-Performance Solid-State Batteries
Article 2022 en
Authors
SG
Sijie Guo
YL
Yutao Li
BL
Bing Li
Abstract
1 min read
The application of solid-state batteries (SSBs) is challenged by the inherently poor interfacial contact between the solid-state electrolyte (SSE) and the electrodes, typically a metallic lithium anode. Building artificial intermediate nanofilms is effective in tackling this roadblock, but their implementation largely relies on vapor-based techniques such as atomic layer deposition, which are expensive, energy-intensive, and time-consuming due to the monolayer deposited per cycle. Herein, an easy and low-cost wet-chemistry fabrication process is used to engineer the anode/solid electrolyte interface in SSBs with nanoscale precision. This coordination-assisted deposition is initiated with polyacrylate acid as a functional polymer to control the surface reaction, which modulates the distribution and decomposition of metal precursors to reliably form a uniform crack-free and flexible nanofilm of a large variety of metal oxides. For demonstration, artificial Al<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> interfacial nanofilms were deposited on a ceramic SSE, typically garnet-structured Li<sub>6.5</sub>La<sub>3</sub>Zr<sub>1.5</sub>Ta<sub>0.5</sub>O<sub>12</sub> (LLZT), that led to a significant decrease in the Li/LLZT interfacial resistance (from 2079.5 to 8.4 Ω cm<sup>2</sup>) as well as extraordinarily long cycle life of the assembled SSBs. This strategy enables the use of a nickel-rich LiNi<sub>0.83</sub>Co<sub>0.07</sub>Mn<sub>0.1</sub>O<sub>2</sub> cathode to deliver a reversible capacity of 201.5 mAh g<sup>-1</sup> at a considerable loading of 4.8 mg cm<sup>-2</sup>, featuring performance metrics for an SSB that is competitive with those of traditional Li-ion systems. Our study demonstrates the potential of solution-based routes as an affordable and scalable manufacturing alternative to vapor-based deposition techniques that can accelerate the development of SSBs for practical applications.
Jianli Cheng, Xinxing Peng, Yaqian Zhang, Yaosen Tian, Tofunmi Ogunfunmi, Andrew Z. Haddad, Andrew Dopilka, Gerbrand Ceder, Kristin A. Persson, Mary Scott
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