RESUMEN
Improved durability, enhanced interfacial stability, and room temperature applicability are desirable properties for all-solid-state lithium metal batteries (ASSLMBs), yet these desired properties are rarely achieved simultaneously. Here, in this work, it is noticed that the huge resistance at Li metal/electrolyte interface dominantly impeded the normal cycling of ASSLMBs especially at around room temperature (<30 °C). Accordingly, a supramolecular polymer ion conductor (SPC) with "weak solvation" of Li+ was prepared. Benefiting from the halogen-bonding interaction between the electron-deficient iodine atom (on 1,4-diiodotetrafluorobenzene) and electron-rich oxygen atoms (on ethylene oxide), the O-Li+ coordination was significantly weakened. Therefore, the SPC achieves rapid Li+ transport with high Li+ transference number, and importantly, derives a unique Li2 O-rich SEI with low interfacial resistance on lithium metal surface, therefore enabling stable cycling of ASSLMBs even down to 10 °C. This work is a new exploration of halogen-bonding chemistry in solid polymer electrolyte and highlights the importance of "weak solvation" of Li+ in the solid-state electrolyte for room temperature ASSLMBs.
RESUMEN
The practical application of lithium metal batteries is impeded by the growth of dendrites and decomposition of electrolytes especially at high temperature in normal carbonate-based electrolytes. Herein, a novel urea-based molecule, 1,3-dimethyl-2-imidazolidinone (DMI), with a high donor number is proposed, which exhibits an extraordinary solubility of LiNO3 of over 5 M. As a result, a sufficient amount of LiNO3 is readily introduced into the carbonate electrolytes with DMI as an additive, and an average coulombic efficiency of 99.1% for lithium plating/stripping is achieved due to a stable solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) rich in inorganic-rich lithium salts. The Li||Li symmetric cell achieves a stable operation for over 2500 h at 0.5 mA cm-2 and 1 mAh cm-2, and a granular shape of deposited Li metal is still preserved even at a high current density of 10 mA cm-2. Besides, the decomposition of LiPF6 is inhibited benefiting from its enhanced dissociation after the addition of DMI/LiNO3 and DMI's function as a PF5 scavenger. Consequently, the Li||LiFePO4 cell succeeds to achieve an excellent capacity retention of 95.6% after 2200 cycles at a high rate of 5C, and a stable operation is realized at a high temperature of 60 °C even under harsh conditions (45 µm ultrathin Li and â¼1.5 mAh cm-2 LiFePO4). This work enriches the solvents and additives pool for stable and high-performance lithium metal batteries and will shed light on future developments of advanced battery electrolytes.
RESUMEN
Poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-based solid electrolyte suffers from limited anodic stability and an intrinsic flammable issue, hindering the achievement of high energy density and safe all-solid-state lithium batteries. Herein, we surprisingly found out that a bromine-rich additive, decabromodiphenyl ethane (DBDPE), could be preferably oxidized at an elevated voltage and decompose to lithium bromide at an elevated potential followed by inducing an organic-rich cathode/electrolyte interphase (CEI) on NCM811 surface, enabling both high-voltage resistance (up to 4.5 V) and flame-retardancy for the PEO-based electrolyte. On the basis of this novel solid electrolyte, all-solid-state Li/NCM811 batteries deliver an average reversible capacity of 151.4 mAh g-1 over the first 150 cycles with high capacity retention (83.0%) and high average Coulombic efficiency (99.7%) even at a 4.5 V cutoff voltage with a unprecedented flame-retardant properties. In view of these exploration, our studies revealed the critical role of LiBr in inducing an organic-rich thin and uniform CEI passivating layer with enhanced lithium ion surface diffusion and high-voltage resistant properties, which provides a new protocol for the further design of a high-voltage PEO-based all-solid-state electrolyte.