Publication | Closed Access
Grain Boundary Design of Solid Electrolyte Actualizing Stable All‐Solid‐State Sodium Batteries
74
Citations
46
References
2021
Year
Advanced inorganic solid electrolytes (SEs) are critical for all-solid-state alkaline metal batteries with high safety and high energy densities. A new interphase design to address the urgent interfacial stability issues against all-solid-state sodium metal batteries (ASSMBs) is proposed. The grain boundary phase of a Mg<sup>2+</sup> -doped Na<sub>3</sub> Zr<sub>2</sub> Si<sub>2</sub> PO<sub>12</sub> conductor (denoted as NZSP-xMg) is manipulated to introduce a favorable Na<sub>3-2</sub> <sub>δ</sub> Mg<sub>δ</sub> PO<sub>4</sub> -dominant interphase which facilitates its intimate contact with Na metal and works as an electron barrier to suppress Na metal dendrite penetration into the electrolyte bulk. The optimal NZSP-0.2Mg electrolyte endows a low interfacial resistance of 93 Ω cm<sup>2</sup> at room temperature, over 16 times smaller than that of Na<sub>3</sub> Zr<sub>2</sub> Si<sub>2</sub> PO<sub>12</sub> . The Na plating/stripping with small polarization is retained under 0.3 mA cm<sup>-2</sup> for more than 290 days (7000 h), representing a record high cycling stability of SEs for ASSMBs. An all-solid-state NaCrO<sub>2</sub> //Na battery is accordingly assembled manifesting a high capacity of 110 mA h g<sup>-1</sup> at 1 C for 1755 cycles with almost no capacity decay. Excellent rate capability at 5 C is realized with a high Coulombic efficiency of 99.8%, signifying promising application in solid-state electrochemical energy storage systems.
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