4.6 Review

Stabilizing Metallic Na Anodes via Sodiophilicity Regulation: A Review

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15134636

Keywords

sodium-metal batteries; sodium-metal anodes; Na wetting; interfacial contact; dendrite growth

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Electricity (OE) through Pacific Northwest National Laboratory [DE-AC06-76LO1830, 70247]
  2. International Collaborative Energy Technology R&D Program of the Korea Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP), the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy of the Republic of Korea [20198510050010]
  3. Anhui University [S020318008/007]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province [2108085QE202]

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This review focuses on the challenges and strategies regarding wetting of sodium in sodium-metal batteries (SMBs). The article provides a general description of the wetting issues encountered in different SMB systems and discusses emerging strategies for improving wetting and stabilizing sodium metal anodes. The review also highlights overlooked aspects and proposes promising areas for further research.
This review focuses on the Na wetting challenges and relevant strategies regarding stabilizing sodium-metal anodes in sodium-metal batteries (SMBs). The Na anode is the essential component of three key energy storage systems, including molten SMBs (i.e., intermediate-temperature Na-S and ZEBRA batteries), all-solid-state SMBs, and conventional SMBs using liquid electrolytes. We begin with a general description of issues encountered by different SMB systems and point out the common challenge in Na wetting. We detail the emerging strategies of improving Na wettability and stabilizing Na metal anodes for the three types of batteries, with the emphasis on discussing various types of tactics developed for SMBs using liquid electrolytes. We conclude with a discussion of the overlooked yet critical aspects (Na metal utilization, N/P ratio, critical current density, etc.) in the existing strategies for an individual battery system and propose promising areas (anolyte incorporation and catholyte modifications for lower-temperature molten SMBs, cell evaluation under practically relevant current density and areal capacity, etc.) that we believe to be the most urgent for further pursuit. Comprehensive investigations combining complementary post-mortem, in situ, and operando analyses to elucidate cell-level structure-performance relations are advocated.

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