Publication | Closed Access
Reviving rechargeable lithium metal batteries: enabling next-generation high-energy and high-power cells
295
Citations
40
References
2011
Year
Li DendritesEngineeringEnergy ConversionLi–graphene CellsGraphene SheetsChemical EngineeringEnergy Storage DeviceSodium BatteryHigh-power CellsMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringEnergy HarvestingBattery Electrode MaterialsLithium-ion BatteryLithium-ion BatteriesEnergy StorageSolid-state BatteryElectrochemistryElectric BatteryLi-ion Battery MaterialsMetal AnodeGrapheneElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteriesAnode Materials
Herein reported is a fundamentally new strategy for reviving rechargeable lithium (Li) metal batteries and enabling the emergence of next-generation safe batteries featuring a graphene-supported Li metal anode, including the highly promising Li–sulfur, Li–air, and Li–graphene cells with exceptionally high energy or power densities. All the Li metal anode-based batteries suffer from a high propensity to form Li dendrites (tree-like structures) at the anode upon repeated discharges/charges. A dendrite could eventually penetrate through the separator to reach the cathode, causing internal short-circuiting and even explosion, the main reason for the battery industry to abandon rechargeable lithium metal batteries in the early 1990s. By implementing graphene sheets to increase the anode surface areas, one can significantly reduce the anode current density, thereby dramatically prolonging the dendrite initiation time and decreasing the growth rate of a dendrite, if ever initiated, possibly by a factor of up to 1010 and 105, respectively.
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