Liquid metal as an efficient protective layer for lithium metal anodes in all-solid-state batteries

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Abstract

Lithium metal batteries with inorganic solid-state electrolytes have emerged as strong and attractive candidates for electrochemical energy storage devices because of their high-energy content and safety. Nonetheless, inherent challenges of deleterious lithium dendrite growth and poor interfacial stability hinder their commercial application. Herein, we report a liquid metal-coated lithium metal (LM@Li) anode strategy to improve the contact between lithium metal and a Li6PS5Cl inorganic electrolyte. The LM@Li symmetric cell shows over 1000 h of stable lithium plating/stripping cycles at 2 mA cm−2 and a significantly higher critical current density of 9.8 mA cm−2 at 25°C. In addition, a full battery assembled with a high-capacity composite LiNbO3@LiNi0.7Co0.2Mn0.1O2 (LNO@NCM721) cathode shows stable cycling performance. Experimental and computational results have demonstrated that dendrite growth tolerance and physical contact in solid-state batteries can be reinforced by using LM interlayers for interfacial modification.

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Zhou, S., Li, M., Wang, P., Cheng, L., Chen, L., Huang, Y., … Wei, J. (2024). Liquid metal as an efficient protective layer for lithium metal anodes in all-solid-state batteries. Carbon Energy, 6(7). https://doi.org/10.1002/cey2.462

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