A self-healing plastic ceramic electrolyte by an aprotic dynamic polymer network for lithium metal batteries
Oxide ceramic electrolytes (OCEs) have great potential for solid-state lithium metal (Li 0 ) battery applications because, in theory, their high elastic modulus provides better resistance to Li 0 dendrite growth. However, in practice, OCEs can hardly survive critical current densities higher than 1 ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2024-11, Vol.15 (1), p.10015-13, Article 10015 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Oxide ceramic electrolytes (OCEs) have great potential for solid-state lithium metal (Li
0
) battery applications because, in theory, their high elastic modulus provides better resistance to Li
0
dendrite growth. However, in practice, OCEs can hardly survive critical current densities higher than 1 mA/cm
2
. Key issues that contribute to the breakdown of OCEs include Li
0
penetration promoted by grain boundaries (GBs), uncontrolled side reactions at electrode-OCE interfaces, and, equally importantly, defects evolution (e.g., void growth and crack propagation) that leads to local current concentration and mechanical failure inside and on OCEs. Here, taking advantage of a dynamically crosslinked aprotic polymer with non-covalent –CH
3
⋯CF
3
bonds, we developed a plastic ceramic electrolyte (PCE) by hybridizing the polymer framework with ionically conductive ceramics. Using in-situ synchrotron X-ray technique and Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (Cryo-TEM), we uncover that the PCE exhibits self-healing/repairing capability through a two-step dynamic defects removal mechanism. This significantly suppresses the generation of hotspots for Li
0
penetration and chemomechanical degradations, resulting in durability beyond 2000 hours in Li
0
-Li
0
cells at 1 mA/cm
2
. Furthermore, by introducing a polyacrylate buffer layer between PCE and Li
0
-anode, long cycle life >3600 cycles was achieved when paired with a 4.2 V zero-strain cathode, all under near-zero stack pressure.
Self-healing is an appealing property for solid-state battery electrolytes to combat Li metal dendrites that pierce through the solid electrolyte. Here, authors report a self-healing electrolyte and observe its self-repairing kinetics in real-time using advanced microscopy. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-024-53869-z |