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Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide

Utilization of lithium (Li) metal anode in solid‐state batteries (SSBs) with sulfide solid‐state electrolyte (SSE) is hindered by the instable Li/SSE interface. A general solution to solve this problem is to place an expensive indium (In) foil between the SSE and Li, while it decreases the output vo...

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Autores principales: Wang, Muqin, Peng, Zhe, Luo, Wenwei, Zhang, Qiang, Li, Zhendong, Zhu, Yun, Lin, Huan, Cai, Liangting, Yao, Xiayin, Ouyang, Chuying, Wang, Deyu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7341093/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32670761
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202000237
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author Wang, Muqin
Peng, Zhe
Luo, Wenwei
Zhang, Qiang
Li, Zhendong
Zhu, Yun
Lin, Huan
Cai, Liangting
Yao, Xiayin
Ouyang, Chuying
Wang, Deyu
author_facet Wang, Muqin
Peng, Zhe
Luo, Wenwei
Zhang, Qiang
Li, Zhendong
Zhu, Yun
Lin, Huan
Cai, Liangting
Yao, Xiayin
Ouyang, Chuying
Wang, Deyu
author_sort Wang, Muqin
collection PubMed
description Utilization of lithium (Li) metal anode in solid‐state batteries (SSBs) with sulfide solid‐state electrolyte (SSE) is hindered by the instable Li/SSE interface. A general solution to solve this problem is to place an expensive indium (In) foil between the SSE and Li, while it decreases the output voltage and thus the energy density of the battery. In this work, an alternative strategy is demonstrated to boost the cycling performances of SSB by wrapping a graphene oxide (GO) layer on the anode. According to density functional theory results, initial deposition of a thin Li layer on the defective GO sheets leads to the formation of a dipole structure, due to the electron‐withdrawing ability of GO acting on Li. By incorporating GO sheets in a nanocomposite of copper‐cuprous oxide‐GO (Cu‐Cu(2)O‐GO, CCG), a composite Li anode enables a high coulombic efficiency above 99.5% over 120 cycles for an SSB using Li(10)GeP(2)S(12) SSE and LiCoO(2) cathode, and the sulfide SSE is not chemically decomposed after cycling. The highest occupied molecule orbital/lowest unoccupied molecular orbital energy gap of this Li/GO dipole structure likely stretches over those of Li and sulfide SSE, enabling stabilized Li/SSE interface that can replace the expensive In layer as Li protective structure in SSBs.
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spelling pubmed-73410932020-07-14 Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide Wang, Muqin Peng, Zhe Luo, Wenwei Zhang, Qiang Li, Zhendong Zhu, Yun Lin, Huan Cai, Liangting Yao, Xiayin Ouyang, Chuying Wang, Deyu Adv Sci (Weinh) Communications Utilization of lithium (Li) metal anode in solid‐state batteries (SSBs) with sulfide solid‐state electrolyte (SSE) is hindered by the instable Li/SSE interface. A general solution to solve this problem is to place an expensive indium (In) foil between the SSE and Li, while it decreases the output voltage and thus the energy density of the battery. In this work, an alternative strategy is demonstrated to boost the cycling performances of SSB by wrapping a graphene oxide (GO) layer on the anode. According to density functional theory results, initial deposition of a thin Li layer on the defective GO sheets leads to the formation of a dipole structure, due to the electron‐withdrawing ability of GO acting on Li. By incorporating GO sheets in a nanocomposite of copper‐cuprous oxide‐GO (Cu‐Cu(2)O‐GO, CCG), a composite Li anode enables a high coulombic efficiency above 99.5% over 120 cycles for an SSB using Li(10)GeP(2)S(12) SSE and LiCoO(2) cathode, and the sulfide SSE is not chemically decomposed after cycling. The highest occupied molecule orbital/lowest unoccupied molecular orbital energy gap of this Li/GO dipole structure likely stretches over those of Li and sulfide SSE, enabling stabilized Li/SSE interface that can replace the expensive In layer as Li protective structure in SSBs. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7341093/ /pubmed/32670761 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202000237 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Published by WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Communications
Wang, Muqin
Peng, Zhe
Luo, Wenwei
Zhang, Qiang
Li, Zhendong
Zhu, Yun
Lin, Huan
Cai, Liangting
Yao, Xiayin
Ouyang, Chuying
Wang, Deyu
Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide
title Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide
title_full Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide
title_fullStr Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide
title_full_unstemmed Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide
title_short Improving the Interfacial Stability between Lithium and Solid‐State Electrolyte via Dipole‐Structured Lithium Layer Deposited on Graphene Oxide
title_sort improving the interfacial stability between lithium and solid‐state electrolyte via dipole‐structured lithium layer deposited on graphene oxide
topic Communications
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7341093/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32670761
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202000237
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