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Electrolyte Solvation Engineering Stabilizing Anode‐Free Sodium Metal Battery With 4.0 V‐Class Layered Oxide Cathode

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Citations

41

References

2024

Year

Abstract

Anode-free sodium metal batteries (AFSMBs) are regarded as the "ceiling" for current sodium-based batteries. However, their practical application is hindered by the unstable electrolyte and interfacial chemistry at the high-voltage cathode and anode-free side, especially under extreme temperature conditions. Here, an advanced electrolyte design strategy based on electrolyte solvation engineering is presented, which shapes a weakly solvating anion-stabilized (WSAS) electrolyte by balancing the interaction between the Na<sup>+</sup>-solvent and Na<sup>+</sup>-anion. The special interaction constructs rich contact ion pairs (CIPs) /aggregates (AGGs) clusters at the electrode/electrolyte interface during the dynamic solvation process which facilitates the formation of a uniform and stable interfacial layer, enabling highly stable cycling of 4.0 V-class layered oxide cathode from -40 °C to 60 °C and excellent reversibility of Na plating/stripping with an ultrahigh average CE of 99.89%. Ultimately, industrial multi-layer anode-free pouch cells using the WSAS electrolyte achieve 80% capacity remaining after 50 cycles and even deliver 74.3% capacity at -30 °C. This work takes a pivotal step for the further development of high-energy-density Na batteries.

References

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