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Unveiling the Stable Nature of the Solid Electrolyte Interphase between Lithium Metal and LiPON via Cryogenic Electron Microscopy

Authors :
Weikang Li
Minghao Zhang
Chengcheng Fang
Suk Jun Kim
Xuefeng Wang
Bingyu Lu
Han Nguyen
Shen Wang
Min-cheol Kim
Diyi Cheng
Thomas A. Wynn
Ying Shirley Meng
Ryosuke Shimizu
Shuang Bai
Source :
Joule, vol 4, iss 11
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2020.

Abstract

The solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) is regarded as the most complex but the least understood constituent in secondary batteries using liquid and solid electrolytes. The nanostructures of SEIs were recently reported to be equally important to the chemistry of SEIs for stabilizing Li metal in liquid electrolyte. However, the dearth of such knowledge in all-solid-state battery (ASSB) has hindered a complete understanding of how certain solid-state electrolytes, such as LiPON, manifest exemplary stability against Li metal. Characterizing such solid-solid interfaces is difficult due to the buried, highly reactive, and beam-sensitive nature of the constituents within. By employing cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM), the interphase between Li metal and LiPON is successfully preserved and probed, revealing a multilayer mosaic SEI structure with concentration gradients of nitrogen and phosphorous, materializing as crystallites within an amorphous matrix. This unique SEI nanostructure is less than 80 nm and is shown stable and free of any organic lithium containing species or lithium fluoride components, in contrast to SEIs often found in state-of-the-art organic liquid electrolytes. Our findings reveal insights on the nanostructures and chemistry of such SEIs as a key component in lithium metal batteries to stabilize Li metal anode.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Joule, vol 4, iss 11
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a3ffc5345852180c0f87990a055e269