Aluminum foil negative electrodes with multiphase microstructure for all-solid-state Li-ion batteries

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Abstract

Metal negative electrodes that alloy with lithium have high theoretical charge storage capacity and are ideal candidates for developing high-energy rechargeable batteries. However, such electrode materials show limited reversibility in Li-ion batteries with standard non-aqueous liquid electrolyte solutions. To circumvent this issue, here we report the use of non-pre-lithiated aluminum-foil-based negative electrodes with engineered microstructures in an all-solid-state Li-ion cell configuration. When a 30-μm-thick Al94.5In5.5 negative electrode is combined with a Li6PS5Cl solid-state electrolyte and a LiNi0.6Mn0.2Co0.2O2-based positive electrode, lab-scale cells deliver hundreds of stable cycles with practically relevant areal capacities at high current densities (6.5 mA cm−2). We also demonstrate that the multiphase Al-In microstructure enables improved rate behavior and enhanced reversibility due to the distributed LiIn network within the aluminum matrix. These results demonstrate the possibility of improved all-solid-state batteries via metallurgical design of negative electrodes while simplifying manufacturing processes.

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Liu, Y., Wang, C., Yoon, S. G., Han, S. Y., Lewis, J. A., Prakash, D., … McDowell, M. T. (2023). Aluminum foil negative electrodes with multiphase microstructure for all-solid-state Li-ion batteries. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39685-x

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