4.6 Article

Fabrication of ultra-thin, flexible, dendrite-free, robust and nanostructured solid electrolyte membranes for solid-state Li-batteries

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 10, Issue 22, Pages 12196-12212

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2ta01412b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DST-Nano-Mission [DST/NM/TUE/EE-03/2019-1 CG-IIT RKE]

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Solid-state lithium batteries with high energy density and better safety features are proposed to revolutionize battery-operated electric vehicles and other defense appliances. Inorganic solid electrolytes have some issues, while solid polymer electrolytes are promising options. This study optimizes the distribution of nanofibers in the polymer network to obtain ultra-thin, flexible, dendrite-free, robust, and high-performance nanostructured solid electrolyte polymer composite (NSPC) membranes.
Bulk solid electrolyte-enabled solid-state lithium batteries with high energy density and better safety features are proposed to revolutionize battery-operated electric vehicles and other defense appliances. However, poor contact, high interfacial resistance, and inhomogeneous metallic lithium growth are the severe concerns associated with inorganic solid electrolytes. In this regard, solid polymer electrolytes are promising options for solid-state lithium batteries. Although ion-conducting ceramic incorporation has long been sought for polymer reinforcement, their discontinuous and inhomogeneous distribution inside the polymer network hinders ionic transportation. Further, the excess use of such ionic conducting additives reduces the overall mechanical and thermal properties, which in turn results in the poor performance of lithium batteries. In this study, the percolation of nanofibers in the polymer networks is optimized to obtain ultra-thin, flexible, dendrite-free, robust, and high-performance nanostructured solid electrolyte polymer composite (NSPC) membranes. Nano-engineered NSPC membranes exhibit high flexibility, good electrochemical stability (similar to 5 V vs. Li metal), high thermal endurance (up to 150 degrees C), and high mechanical strength (7.3 MPa). The Li-stripping/plating studies of the NSPC membrane indicate reversible deposition/de-solvation of lithium at the electrode-electrolyte interface without any dendritic growth, which is further supported by ex situ FESEM and XPS analysis. Furthermore, the NSPC membrane offers intimate solid-solid contact with minimal area surface resistance (ASR < 30 omega cm(2)) when it is utilized in Li-metal batteries with a high potential cathode, i.e., LiNi1/3Co1/3Mn1/3O2. The excellent specific capacity (similar to 170 mA h g(-1)), rate capability, and cyclability are further obtained. Based on the cost-effective development and excellent performance, the presently developed nanostructured polymer composite membrane may be considered well suited for advanced solid-state Li-batteries.

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