Nano-Micro Letters (Sep 2022)

Insights Into the Interfacial Degradation of High-Voltage All-Solid-State Lithium Batteries

  • Jiawen Li,
  • Yuchen Ji,
  • Haoran Song,
  • Shiming Chen,
  • Shouxiang Ding,
  • Bingkai Zhang,
  • Luyi Yang,
  • Yongli Song,
  • Feng Pan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40820-022-00936-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-based solid polymer electrolyte (SPE) is considered as a promising solid-state electrolyte for all-solid-state lithium batteries (ASSLBs). Nevertheless, the poor interfacial stability with high-voltage cathode materials (e.g., LiCoO2) restricts its application in high energy density solid-state batteries. Herein, high-voltage stable Li3AlF6 protective layer is coated on the surface of LiCoO2 particle to improve the performance and investigate the failure mechanism of PEO-based ASSLBs. The phase transition unveils that chemical redox reaction occurs between the highly reactive LiCoO2 surface and PEO-based SPE, resulting in structure collapse of LiCoO2, hence the poor cycle performance of PEO-based ASSLBs with LiCoO2 at charging voltage of 4.2 V vs Li/Li+. By sharp contrast, no obvious structure change can be found at the surface of Li3AlF6-coated LiCoO2, and the original layered phase was well retained. When the charging voltage reaches up to 4.5 V vs Li/Li+, the intensive electrochemical decomposition of PEO-based SPE occurs, leading to the constant increase of cell impedance and directly causing the poor performance. This work not only provides important supplement to the failure mechanism of PEO-based batteries with LiCoO2, but also presents a universal strategy to retain structure stability of cathode–electrolyte interface in high-voltage ASSLBs.

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