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In Situ Gel Polymer Electrolyte with Inhibited Lithium Dendrite Growth and Enhanced Interfacial Stability for Lithium-Metal Batteries
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Citations
42
References
2021
Year
The practical application of lithium-metal anodes in high-energy-density rechargeable lithium batteries is hindered by the uncontrolled growth of lithium dendrites and limited cycle life. An ether-based gel polymer electrolyte (GPE-H) is developed through in situ polymerization method, which has close contact with the electrode interface. Based on DFT calculations, it was confirmed that the cationic groups produced by polar solvent tris(1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoroisopropyl) (HFiP) initiate the ring-opening polymerization of DOL in the battery. As a result, GPE-H achieves considerable ionic conductivity (1.6 × 10<sup>-3</sup> S cm<sup>-1</sup>) at ambient temperature, high lithium-ion transference number (<i>t</i><sub>Li<sup>+</sup></sub> > 0.6) and an electrochemical stability window as high as 4.5 V. GPE-H can achieve up to 800 h uniform lithium plating/stripping at a current density of 1.65 mA cm<sup>-2</sup> in Li symmetrical batteries. Li-S and LiFePO<sub>4</sub> batteries using this GPE-H have long cycle performances at ambient temperature and high Coulomb efficiency (CE > 99.2%). From the above, in situ polymerized GPE-H electrolytes are promising candidates for high-energy-density rechargeable lithium batteries.
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