4.7 Article

Enhanced ionic conductivity of Cu-doped NASICON solid electrolyte for solid-state sodium batteries

Journal

JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 937, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jelechem.2023.117405

Keywords

Sodium-ion batteries; Solid electrolytes; NZSP; Cu doping; Ionic conductivity

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Na-ion batteries face challenges with liquid electrolytes due to their instability and unsafety. Solid electrolytes of NASICON-type (NZSP) show promise as a replacement because of their high ionic conductivity and thermal stability. Cu-doped Na3+2xZr2-xCuxSi2PO12 (xCu-NZSP) solid electrolytes have been designed and synthesized, with the Cu doping increasing Na+ carrier concentration and reducing sintering temperature for improved ionic conductivity. The optimal 0.06Cu-NZSP exhibits the highest ionic conductivity, wide electrochemical window, and stable polarization voltage. The solid-state Na|0.06Cu-NZSP|Na0.67Mn0.47Ni0.33Ti0.2O2 Na-ion batteries retain 98.76% capacity at 0.5 C after 100 cycles at 60℃, demonstrating the potential of 0.06Cu-NZSP for practical applications.
Na-ion batteries using traditional liquid electrolytes face comparable challenges due to the instability and unsafety of liquid electrolytes. NASICON-type of solid electrolytes (NZSP) are promising for replacing the liq-uid electrolytes because of their outstanding ionic conductivity and high thermal stability. Nevertheless, the required high sintering temperature (1200 -1300 oC) with long duration in solid-state synthesis may arouse the abnormal grain growth and the volatilization of materials at the grain boundaries in NZSP. Herein, novel Cu-doped Na3+2xZr2-xCuxSi2PO12 (xCu-NZSP, x = 0.02-0.1) solid electrolytes are designed and synthesized via solid state reaction. The Cu doping can increase the concentration of Na+ carriers in the crystalline struc-ture and reduce the sintering temperature, which results in enhanced ionic conductivity and decreased grain boundaries. The optimal 0.06Cu-NZSP possesses the highest ionic conductivity, wide electrochemical window, and stable polarization voltage due to its enhanced densification and regulated the grain size. Furthermore, the interface state between 0.06Cu-NZSP and Na metal was analyzed by the X-ray powder diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The solid-state Na|0.06Cu-NZSP|Na0.67Mn0.47Ni0.33Ti0.2O2 Na-ion batteries remains a high capacity retention of 98.76% at 0.5 C after 100 cycles at 60 oC, indicating great potential of the novel 0.06Cu-NZSP in practical applications.

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