4.8 Article

Engineering a High-Voltage Durable Cathode/Electrolyte Interface for All-Solid-State Lithium Metal Batteries via In Situ Electropolymerization

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 18, Pages 21018-21027

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c02731

Keywords

cathode electrolyte interphase; high voltage; all-solid-state lithium battery; poly(trifluoroethyl methacrylate); interface engineering

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFB0905400]
  2. Major Technological Innovation Project of Hubei Provice [2019AAA019]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M662609, 2020T130217]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52102249]

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A high-voltage stable solid-state interface layer was constructed between the cathode and the solid polymer electrolyte of a lithium-ion battery using in situ solvent-free bulk electropolymerization. This interface layer improves the oxidation window and ionic conductivity of the electrolyte, resulting in high-performance and high-energy-density solid-state batteries.
Poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-based polymer electrolytes have been widely studied as a result of their flexibility, excellent interface contact, and high compatibility with a lithium metal anode. Owing to the poor oxidation resistance of ethers, however, the PEO-based electrolytes are only compatible with low-voltage cathodes, which limits their energy density. Here, a high-voltage stable solid-state interface layer based on polyfluoroalkyl acrylate was constructed via in situ solvent-free bulk electropolymerization between the LiNi0.8Mn0.1Co0.1O2 (NCM811) cathode and the PEO-based solid polymer electrolyte. The electrochemical oxidation window of the as-synthesized electrolyte was therefore expanded from 4.3 V for the PEO-based matrix electrolyte to 5.1 V, and the ionic conductivity was improved to 1.02 x 10(-4) S cm(-1) at ambient temperature and 4.72 X 10(-4) S cm(-1) at 60 degrees C as a result of the improved Li+ migration. This fabrication process for the interface buffer layer by an in situ electrochemical process provides an innovative and universal interface engineering strategy for high-performance and high-energy-density solid-state batteries, which has not been explicitly discussed before, paving the way toward the large-scale production of the next generation of solid-state lithium batteries.

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