High-rate cycling in 3D dual-doped NASICON architectures toward room-temperature sodium-metal-anode solid-state batteries

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Abstract

Sodium metal-based solid-state batteries hold tremendous potential for next-generation batteries owing to low-cost earth-abundant sodium resources. However, fabricating thin free-standing solid electrolytes that could cycle sodium at high current densities has been a major challenge in developing room temperature solid-state sodium batteries. By developing high conducting Zn2+ and Mg2+ dual-doped Na3Zr2SiPO12 (NASICON) solid electrolytes and fabricating a 3D porous-dense-porous architecture (with an ultrathin, 25 μm, dense separator) coated with a nanoscale ZnO layer, an extremely low anode interfacial resistance of 3.5 Ω cm2 was realized. This enabled a record high critical current density of 40 mA cm−2 at room temperature with no stack pressure and a cumulative sodium cycling capacity of 10.8 A h cm−2 was achieved. Furthermore, pouch cells were assembled as a proof-of-concept with Na3V2(PO4)3 cathodes on dense-porous bilayer electrolytes with sodium metal anodes and cycled up to 2C rates at room temperature with no applied stack pressure.

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Jaschin, P. W., Tang, C. R., & Wachsman, E. D. (2023). High-rate cycling in 3D dual-doped NASICON architectures toward room-temperature sodium-metal-anode solid-state batteries. Energy and Environmental Science, 17(2), 727–737. https://doi.org/10.1039/d3ee03879c

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