4.8 Article

Progress in thermal stability of all-solid-state-Li-ion-batteries

Journal

INFOMAT
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 827-853

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/inf2.12224

Keywords

interface; safety; solid-state battery; solid-state electrolyte; thermal stability

Funding

  1. General Program of National Natural Science Foundation of Beijing [2202058]
  2. General Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [51972334]
  3. Key Program-Automobile Joint Fund of National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1964205]
  4. Department of Science and Technology of Jiangsu Province [BE2020003]
  5. National Overseas High-level Talent Recruitment Program [E1JF021E11]
  6. Talent Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences
  7. Tianmu Lake Institute of Advanced Energy Storage Technologies [TIES-SS0001]
  8. Yangtze River Delta Physics Research Center

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This review discusses solutions to the thermal issues of lithium-ion batteries, introduces the development prospects of all-solid-state lithium-ion batteries and the current research status of thermal stability of solid-state electrolytes.
Thermal safety is one of the major issues for lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) used in electric vehicles. The thermal runaway mechanism and process of LIBs have been extensively studied, but the thermal problems of LIBs remain intractable due to the flammability, volatility and corrosiveness of organic liquid electrolytes. To ultimately solve the thermal problem, all-solid-state LIBs (ASSLIBs) are considered to be the most promising technology. However, research on the thermal stability of solid-state electrolytes (SEs) is still in its initial stage, and the thermal safety of ASSLIBs still needs further validation. Moreover, the specified reviews summarizing the thermal stability of ASSLIBs and all types of SEs are still missing. To fill this gap, this review systematically discussed recent progress in the field of thermal properties investigation for ASSLIBs, form levels of materials and interface to the whole battery. The thermal properties of three major types of SEs, including polymer, oxide, and sulfide SEs are systematically reviewed here. This review aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of the thermal stability of SEs for the benign development of ASSLIBs and their promising application under practical operating conditions.

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