Abstract
Due to high ionic conductivity, favorable mechanical plasticity, and non-flammable properties, inorganic sulfide solid electrolytes bring opportunities to the practical realization of rechargeable lithium-metal batteries with high energy, yet their use was impeded by an electrochemically unstable Li-electrolyte interface. Herein, we propose to address the issue via a Li+-conductive gel polymer interlayer, which is derived in situ from a conventional liquid ether electrolyte during the cell fabrication process. The gel polymer interlayer not only enables intimate solid-solid contact and uniform Li-ion flux at the heterointerface but also effectively inhibits interfacial reactions and Li dendrite growth. With improved interfacial stability, a Li-Li symmetric cell with the gel polymer interlayer demonstrates an ultra-stable Li plating/stripping performance of over 1300 hours at 0.1 mA cm-2 and 350 hours at 0.5 mA cm-2 at room temperature, and a high critical current density of >5 mA cm-2. This work offers general insights into a reasonable design of an anode/electrolyte interface for high-energy rechargeable Li-metal batteries. This journal is
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CITATION STYLE
Wang, Y. H., Yue, J., Wang, W. P., Chen, W. P., Zhang, Y., Yang, Y. G., … Guo, Y. G. (2021). Constructing a stable interface between the sulfide electrolyte and the Li metal anode: Via a Li+-conductive gel polymer interlayer. Materials Chemistry Frontiers, 5(14), 5328–5335. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1qm00395j
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