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Designing current collectors and constructing efficient artificial solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) layers are promising strategies for achieving dendrite-free Li deposition and practical applications in Li metal batteries (LMBs). Electrodeposition is advantageous for large-scale production and allows the direct formation of current collectors without binders, making them immediately usable as electrodes. In this study, an adherent Cu2S thin-layer on Cu foil is synthesized through anodic electrodeposition from a Na2S solution in a one-step process, followed by the generation of Li2S layers as artificial SEI layers via a conversion reaction (3DLi2S-Cu foil). The Li2S layers move from the 3D Cu surface to the deposited Li surface, facilitating uniform and dense Li deposition. The 3DLi2S-Cu foil structure demonstrates stable cycling performance over 350 cycles in an asymmetric cell, with a capacity of 1 mAh cm-2 at 1 mA cm-2. Moreover, symmetric cells with 5 mAh cm-2 of deposited Li exhibit a stable cycle life for over 1200 h. When paired with commercial LiFePO4 (LFP), the full cells show substantially enhanced cyclability, regardless of the amount of deposited Li. This study provides new insights into the construction of artificial SEIs for facilitating commercial applications.
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Demands for green ammonia production increase due to its application as a proton carrier, and recent achievements in electrochemical Li-mediated nitrogen reduction reactions (Li-NRRs) show promising reliability. Here, it is demonstrated that F-containing additives in the electrolyte improve ammonia production by modulating the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI). It is suggested that the anionic additives with low lowest unoccupied molecular orbital levels enhance efficiency by contributing to the formation of a conductive SEI incorporated with LiF. Specifically, as little as 0.3 wt.% of BF4 - additive to the electrolyte, the Faradaic efficiency (FE) for ammonia production is enhanced by over 15% compared to an additive-free electrolyte, achieving a high yield of 161 ± 3 nmol s-1 cm-2. The BF4 - additive exhibits advantages, with decreased overpotential and improved FE, compared to its use as the bulk electrolyte. The observation of the Li3N upper layer implies that active Li-NRR catalytic cycles are occurring on the outermost SEI, and density functional theory simulations propose that an SEI incorporated with LiF facilitates energy profiles for the protonation by adjusting the binding energies of the intermediates compared to bare copper. This study unlocks the potential of additives and offers insights into the SEIs for efficient Li-NRRs.
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Achieving high energy density has always been the goal of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). SiOx has emerged as a compelling candidate for use as a negative electrode material due to its remarkable capacity. However, the huge volume expansion and the unstable electrode interface during (de)lithiation, hinder its further development. Herein, we report a facile strategy for the synthesis of surface fluorinated SiOx (SiOx@vG-F), and investigate their influences on battery performance. Systematic experiments investigations indicate that the reaction between Li+ and fluorine groups promotes the inâ situ formation of stable LiF-rich solid electrolyte interface (SEI) on the surface of SiOx@vG-F anode, which effectively suppresses the pulverization of microsized SiOx particles during the charge and discharge cycle. As a result, the SiOx@vG-F enabled a higher capacity retention of 86.4 % over 200â cycles at 1.0â C in the SiOx@vG-F||LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 full cell. This approach will provide insights for the advancement of alternative electrode materials in diverse energy conversion and storage systems.
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Lithium batteries employing Li or silicon (Si) anodes hold promise for the next-generation energy storage systems. However, their cycling behavior encounters rapid capacity degradation due to the vulnerability of solid electrolyte interphases (SEIs). Though anion-derived SEIs mitigate this degradation, the unavoidable reduction of solvents introduces heterogeneity to SEIs, leading to fractures during cycling. Here, we elucidate how the reductive stability of solvents, dominated by the electrophilicity (EPT) and coordination ability (CDA), delineates the SEI formed on Li or Si anodes. Solvents exhibiting lower EPT and CDA demonstrate enhanced tolerance to reduction, resulting in inorganic-rich SEIs with homogeneity. Guided by these criteria, we synthesized three promising solvents tailored for Li or Si anodes. The decomposition of these solvents is dictated by their EPTs under similar solvation structures, imparting distinct characteristics to SEIs and impacting battery performance. The optimized electrolyte, 1â M lithium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide (LiFSI) in N-Pyrrolidine-trifluoromethanesulfonamide (TFSPY), achieves 600 cycles of Si anodes with a capacity retention of 81 % (1910â mAh g-1). In anode-free Cu||LiNi0.5Co0.2Mn0.3O2 (NCM523) pouch cells, this electrolyte sustains over 100 cycles with an 82 % capacity retention. These findings illustrate that reducing solvent decomposition benefits SEI formation, offering valuable insights for the designing electrolytes in high-energy lithium batteries.
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Solid-state lithium metal batteries (SSLMBs) with solid polymer electrolyte (SPE) are highly promising for next-generation energy storage due to their enhanced safety and energy density. However, the stability of the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) on the lithium metal/SPE interface is a major challenge, as continuous SEI degradation and regeneration during cycling lead to capacity fading. This article investigates the SEI formation on lithium anodes (l-SEI) and composite lithium anodes (c-SEI) in solid-state lithium metal batteries. The composite anodes form a uniform Li2S-rich inorganic SEI layer and a thinner organic SEI layer, effectively passivating the interface for enhanced cycling stability. Specifically, the full cells with c-SEI anodes sustain over 400 cycles at 0.5 C under a high areal capacity of 2.0 mAh cm-2. Moreover, the reversible high-loading solid-state pouch cells exhibit exceptional safety even after curling and cutting. These findings offer valuable insights into developing composite electrodes with robust SEI for solid-state polymer-based lithium metal batteries.
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Passivating solid electrolyte interphases (SEIs) in Ca metal anodes constitute a long-standing challenge, as they block Ca2+ transport and inhibit reversible Ca deposition/stripping. Current solutions focus primarily on boron/aluminum-based electrolytes to mitigate such interfacial issues by producing Ca2+-conductive species, yet the complex synthetic procedure of these salts restricts the widespread application. Moreover, whether any inorganic phases possess decent Ca2+ conductivity within SEIs remains ambiguous. Herein, we report that a commercially available CaI2-dimethoxyethane electrolyte supports reversible Ca/Ca2+ redox reactions via forming CaI2-involved SEI, inspired by our density functional theory calculations where CaI2 species is predicted to possess the lowest Ca2+ diffusion barrier among a range of inorganic phases. We further materialize this finding by introducing a serial of borate ester anion receptors, resulting in the formation of CaI2/borides hybrid SEIs with an enhanced Ca2+ conductivity. Consequently, the resultant electrolytes realize a 7-fold reduction in deposition/stripping overpotential compared to anion receptor-free one, allowing for the construction of reversible Ca-metal full cells with high-capacity selenium and organic cathodes.
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Effective electrolyte compositions are of primary importance in raising the performance of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Recently, fluorinated cyclic phosphazenes in combination with fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC) have been introduced as promising electrolyte additives, which can decompose to form an effective dense, uniform, and thin protective layer on the surface of electrodes. Although the basic electrochemical aspects of cyclic fluorinated phosphazenes combined with FEC were introduced, it is still unclear how these two compounds interact constructively during operation. This study investigates the complementary effect of FEC and ethoxy(pentafluoro)cyclotriphosphazene (EtPFPN) in aprotic organic electrolyte in LiNi0.5 Co0.2 Mn0.3 O ⥠SiOx /C full cells. The formation mechanism of lithium ethyl methyl carbonate (LEMC)-EtPFPN interphasial intermediate products and the reaction mechanism of lithium alkoxide with EtPFPN are proposed and supported by Density Functional Theory calculations. A novel property of FEC is also discussed here, called molecular-cling-effect (MCE). To the best knowledge, the MCE has not been reported in the literature, although FEC belongs to one of the most investigated electrolyte additives. The beneficial MCE of FEC toward the sub-sufficient solid-electrolyte interphase forming additive compound EtPFPN is investigated via gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, gas chromatography high resolution-accurate mass spectrometry, in situ shell-isolated nanoparticle-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy.
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Pre-lithiation via electrolysis, herein defined as electrolytic pre-lithiation, using cost-efficient electrolytes based on lithium chloride (LiCl), is successfully demonstrated as a proof-of-concept for enabling lithium-ion battery full-cells with high silicon content negative electrodes. An electrolyte for pre-lithiation based on γ-butyrolactone and LiCl is optimized using boron-containing additives (lithium bis(oxalato)borate, lithium difluoro(oxalate)borate) and CO2 with respect to the formation of a protective solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) on silicon thin films as model electrodes. Reversible lithiation in Si||Li metal cells is demonstrated with Coulombic efficiencies (CEff ) of 95-96% for optimized electrolytes comparable to 1 m LiPF6 /EC:EMC 3:7. Formation of an effective SEI is shown by cyclic voltammetry and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). electrolytic pre-lithiation experiments show that notable amounts of the gaseous product Cl2 dissolve in the electrolyte leading to a self-discharge Cl2 /Cl- shuttle mechanism between the electrodes lowering pre-lithiation efficiency and causing current collector corrosion. However, no significant degradation of the Si active material and the SEI due to contact with elemental chlorine is found by SEM, impedance, and XPS. In NCM111||Si full-cells, the capacity retention in the 100th cycle can be significantly increased from 54% to 78% by electrolytic pre-lithiation, compared to reference cells without pre-lithiation of Si.
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Urgent calls for reversible cycling performance of silicon (Si) requires an efficient solution to maintain the silicon-electrolyte interface stable. Herein, a conductive biphenyl-polyoxadiazole (bPOD) layer is coated on Si particles to enhance the electrochemical process and prolong the cells lifespan. The conformal bPOD coatings are mixed ionicelectronic conductors, which not only inhibit the infinite growth of solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) but also endow electrodes with outstanding ion/electrons transport capacity. The superior 3D porous structure in the continuous phase allows the bPOD layers to act like a sponge to buffer volume variation, resulting in high structural stability. The in situ polymerized bPOD coating and it-driven thin LiF-rich SEI layer remarkably improve the lithium storage performance of Si anodes, showing a high reversible specific capacity of 1600 mAh g-1 even after 500 cycles at 1 A g-1 along with excellent rate capacity of over 1500 mAh g-1 at 3 A g-1 . It should be noticed that a long cycle life of 800 cycles with 1065 mAh g-1 at 3 A g-1 can also be achieved with a capacity retention of more than 80%. Therefore, we believe this unique polymer coating design paves the way for the widespread adoption of next-generation lithium-ion batteries.
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Sodium metal batteries (SMBs) have been widely studied owing to their relatively high energy density and abundant resources. However, they still need systematic improvement to fulfill the harsh operating conditions for their commercialization. In this review, we summarize the recent progress in SMBs in terms of sodium anode modification, electrolyte exploration, and cathode design. Firstly, we give an overview of the current challenges facing Na metal anodes and the corresponding solutions. Then, the traditional liquid electrolytes and the prospective solid electrolytes for SMBs are summarized. In addition, insertion- and conversion-type cathode materials are introduced. Finally, an outlook for the future of practical SMBs is provided.
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Stable Zn anodes with a high utilization efficiency pose a challenge due to notorious dendrite growth and severe side reactions. Therefore, electrolyte additives are developed to address these issues. However, the additives are always consumed by the electrochemical reactions over cycling, affecting the cycling stability. Here, hexamethylphosphoric triamide (HMPA) is reported as an electrolyte additive for achieving stable cycling of Zn anodes. HMPA reshapes the solvation structures and promotes anion decomposition, leading to the in situ formation of inorganic-rich solid-electrolyte-interphase. More interestingly, this anion decomposition does not involve HMPA, preserving its long-term impact on the electrolyte. Thus, the symmetric cells with HMPA in the electrolyte survive ≈500â h at 10â mA cm-2 for 10â mAh cm-2 or ≈200â h at 40â mA cm-2 for 10â mAh cm-2 with a Zn utilization rate of 85.6 %. The full cells of Zn||V2 O5 exhibit a record-high cumulative capacity even under a lean electrolyte condition (E/C ratio=12â µL mAh-1 ), a limited Zn supply (N/P ratio=1.8) and a high areal capacity (6.6â mAhâ cm-2 ).
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The formation of solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) in "water-in-salt" electrolyte (WiSE) expands the electrochemical stability window of aqueous electrolytes beyond 3.0 V. However, the parasitic hydrogen evolution reaction that drives anode corrosion, cracking, and the subsequent reformation of SEI still occurs, compromising long-term cycling performance of the batteries. To improve cycling stability, an unsaturated monomer acrylamide (AM) is introduced as an electrolyte additive, whose presence in WiSE reduces its viscosity and improves ionic conductivity. Upon charging, AM electropolymerizes into polyacrylamide, as confirmed both experimentally and computationally. The in situ polymer constitutes effective protection layers at both anode and cathode surfaces, and enables LiMn2 O4 ||L-TiO2 full cells with high specific capacity (157 mAh g-1 at 1 C), long-term cycling stability (80% capacity retention within 200 cycles at 1 C), and high rate capability (79 mAh g-1 at 30 C). The in situ electropolymerization found in this work provides an alternative and highly effective strategy to design protective interphases at the negative and positive electrodes for high-voltage aqueous batteries of lithium-ion or beyond.
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Aqueous zinc metal batteries with mild acidic electrolytes are considered promising candidates for large-scale energy storage. However, the Zn anode suffers from severe Zn dendrite growth and side reactions due to the unstable interfacial pH and the absence of a solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) protective layer. Herein, a novel and simple mixed electrolyte strategy is proposed to address these problems. The mixed electrolytes of 2 M ZnSO4 and 2 M Zn (CF3 SO3 )2 can efficiently buffer the interfacial pH and induce the in situ formation of the organic-inorganic SEI layer, which eliminates dendrite growth and prevents side reactions. As a result, Zn anodes in mixed electrolyte exhibit a lifespan enhancement over 400 times, endure stable cycling over 270 h at a high DOD of 62% and achieve high Zn plating/stripping reversibility with an average CE of 99.5% for 1000 cycles at 1 mA cm-2 . The findings pave the way for developing practical electrolyte systems for Zn batteries.
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Dendrite growth and in-homogeneous solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) buildup of Li metal anodes hinder the longtime discharge-charge cycling and safety in secondary metal batteries. Here, the authors report an in-situ restructured artificial lithium/electrolyte SEI exposing an ultrasmooth and thin layer mediated through graphene quantum dots (GQDs). The reformed artificial interphase comprises a mixture of organic/inorganic-rich compositions alike as mosaic interphase, albeit the synergistic effect mediated via hydroxylated GQDs involving redeposition-borne lithium, and its accumulated salts, facilitate a homogeneous and ultrasmooth near fluorine-rich interfacial environment ensuring a facile lithium-ion (Li-ion) diffusion and dendritic-free nature. As a result, symmetrical graphene dots-lithium cells enable a dendrite-less operation up to 2000 h with good cycling stability and capacity retention at current densities 1 and 5 mA cm-2 compared to bare lithium. The well-established fluorinated interface engenders a high reversible capacity and stable performance during the initial and long-term cycles upon configuring in lithium-sulfur (Li-S) cells. Thus, the authors' work illuminates the direction toward achieving dendritic-free smooth and robust metal anodes through manipulating and restructuring the critical SEI chemical components.
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The urgent demand for high energy and safety storage devices is pushing the development of lithium metal batteries. However, unstable solid electrolyte interface (SEI) formation and uncontrollable lithium dendrite growth are still huge challenges for the practical use of lithium metal batteries. Herein, a composite polymer electrolyte (CPE) endowed with designated ion channels is fabricated by constructing nanoscale Uio66-NH2 layer, which has uniformly distributed pore structure to regulate reversible Li plating/stripping in lithium metal batteries. The regular channels within the Uio66-NH2 layer work as an ion sieve to restrict larger TFSI- anions inside its channels and extract Li+ across selectively, which result in a high Li-ion transference number ( t Li + ${t_{{\rm{L}}{{\rm{i}}^{\bm{ + }}}}}$ ) of 0.6. Moreover, CPE provides high ion conductivity (0.245 mS cm-1 at room temperature) and expanded oxidation window (5.1 V) and forms a stable SEI layer. As a result, the assembled lithium metal batteries with CPE exhibit outstanding cyclic stability and capacity retention. The Li/CPE/Li symmetric cell continues plating/stripping over 500 h without short-circuiting. The Li/CPE/LFP cell delivers a reversible capacity of 149.3 mAh g-1 with a capacity retention of 99% after 100 cycles.
Assuntos
Eletrólitos , Lítio , Condutividade Elétrica , Canais Iônicos , PolímerosRESUMO
The emerging potassium-tellurium (K-Te) battery system is expected to realize fast reaction kinetics and excellent rate performance due to the exceptional electrical conductivity of Te. However, there has been a lack of fundamental knowledge about this new K-Te system, including the reaction mechanism and cathode structure design. Herein, a two-step reaction pathway from Te to K2 Te3 and ultimately to K5 Te3 is investigated in carbonate electrolyte-based K-Te batteries by X-ray diffraction, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and selected area electron diffraction characterizations. Additionally, the atomic layer deposition technique is adopted to deposit an ultrathin aluminum oxide (Al2 O3 ) film on the electrode surface, which induces the generation of a stable solid electrolyte interphase layer and reduces the loss of active materials effectively. Consequently, the rationally fabricated Te/porous carbon cathode with functional Al2 O3 coating delivers remarkable long-term cycling stability over 500 cycles at 1 C with an ultralow capacity decay of only 0.01% per cycle. This interface engineering strategy is validated to stabilize the electrode surface, enhance the structural integrity and ensure reliable electron transfer and K-ion conduction over repeated potassiation/depotassiation cycles. These findings are expected to promote the development of high-energy-density K-S/Se/Te batteries.
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Reactive metals are known to electrodeposit with irregular morphological features on planar substrates. A growing body of work suggest that multiple variables: composition, mechanics, structure, ion transport properties, reductive stability, and interfacial energy of interphases, formed either spontaneously or by design on the metal electrode play important but differentiated roles in regulating these morphologies. We examine the effect of fluorinated thermoset polymer coatings on Li deposition by means of experiment and theoretical linear stability analysis. By tuning the chemistry of the polymer backbone and side chains, we investigate how physical and mechanical properties of polymeric interphases influence Li electrodeposit morphology. It is found that an interplay between elasticity and diffusivity leads to an optimum interphase thickness and that higher interfacial energy augments elastic stresses at a metal electrode to prevent out-of-plane deposition. These findings are explained using linear stability analysis of electrodeposition and provide guidelines for designing polymer interphases to stabilize metal anodes in rechargeable batteries.
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The practical application of aqueous rechargeable batteries is hampered by the low energy density and poor cycle stability, which mostly arises from the corrosion of cathode current collector, exfoliation of active material, and narrow electrochemical stability window of aqueous electrolyte. A light-weight and low-cost cathode current collector composed of graphite and carbon nanotube coated on nylon membrane exhibiting corrosion resistance and strong adhesion is developed. Also, a modified aqueous electrolyte with the addition of urea whose window is expanded to ≈3.2 V is developed that contributes to the formation of solid-electrolyte interphase on surfaces of electrodes. LiMn2 O4 /NaTi2 (PO4 )3 Li+ /Na+ hybrid ion battery using such aqueous electrolyte and current collector is demonstrated to cycle up to 10 000 times with low cost (60 dollars per kWh) and high energy density (100 Wh kg-1 ) for stationary energy storage and electronic vehicles applications.
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Fluorinated solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) derived from fluoroethylene carbonate (FEC) is particularly favored for dendrite suppression in lithium metal batteries because of the high Young's modulus (≈64.9 Gpa) and low electronic conductivity (10-31 S cm-1 ) of LiF. However, the transportation ability of Li+ in this fluorinated SEI under high current densities is limited by the low ionic conductivity of LiF (≈10-12 S cm-1 ). Herein, by rational design, 0.1 m lithium bisoxalatodifluorophosphate (LiDFBOP) is adopted to modify fluorinated SEI in FEC based electrolyte for fast charging lithium metal batteries. Benefiting from the synergetic effect of LiDFBOP and FEC, a fluorinated SEI rich in LiF and Lix POy Fz species can be yielded, which can further improve the stability and ionic conductivity of SEI for fast Li+ transportation. Meanwhile, the average coulombic efficiency for Li plating/stripping is improved from 92.0% to 96.7%, thus promoting stable cycling of Li||Li symmetrical batteries with dendrite free morphologies, even at high current densities (3.0 mA cm-2 ) and high plating/stripping capacities (3.0 mAh cm-2 ). More attractively, in practical Li||LiNi0.6 Co0.2 Mn0.2 O2 batteries, the cycling life at 1C and rate capacities at 6C are also significantly improved. Therefore, the synergetic effect of LiDFBOP and FEC provides great potential for achieving advanced lithium metal batteries with fast charging ability.
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High-energy-density Li metal batteries suffer from a short lifespan under practical conditions, such as limited lithium, high loading cathode, and lean electrolytes, owing to the absence of appropriate solid electrolyte interphase (SEI). Herein, a sustainable SEI was designed rationally by combining fluorinated co-solvents with sustained-release additives for practical challenges. The intrinsic uniformity of SEI and the constant supplements of building blocks of SEI jointly afford to sustainable SEI. Specific spatial distributions and abundant heterogeneous grain boundaries of LiF, LiNx Oy , and Li2 O effectively regulate uniformity of Li deposition. In a Li metal battery with an ultrathin Li anode (33â µm), a high-loading LiNi0.5 Co0.2 Mn0.3 O2 cathode (4.4â mAh cm-2 ), and lean electrolytes (6.1â g Ah-1 ), 83 % of initial capacity retains after 150 cycles. A pouch cell (3.5â Ah) demonstrated a specific energy of 340â Wh kg-1 for 60 cycles with lean electrolytes (2.3â gâ Ah-1 ).