Free-standing ultrathin lithium metal–graphene oxide host foils with controllable thickness for lithium batteries

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Abstract

Thin (≤20 μm) and free-standing Li metal foils would enable precise prelithiation of anode materials and high-energy-density Li batteries. Existing Li metal foils are too thick (typically 50 to 750 μm) or too mechanically fragile for these applications. Here, we developed a facile and scalable process for the synthesis of an ultrathin (0.5 to 20 μm), free-standing and mechanically robust Li metal foil within a graphene oxide host. In addition to low areal capacities of ~0.1 to 3.7 mAh cm−2, this Li foil also has a much-improved mechanical strength over conventional pure Li metal foil. Our Li foil can improve the initial Coulombic efficiency of graphite (93%) and silicon (79.4%) anodes to around 100% without generating excessive Li residue, and increases the capacity of Li-ion full cells by 8%. The cycle life of Li metal full cells is prolonged by nine times using this thin Li composite anode.

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Chen, H., Yang, Y., Boyle, D. T., Jeong, Y. K., Xu, R., de Vasconcelos, L. S., … Cui, Y. (2021). Free-standing ultrathin lithium metal–graphene oxide host foils with controllable thickness for lithium batteries. Nature Energy, 6(8), 790–798. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-021-00833-6

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