Iran Daily

Researcher­s design dendrite-free lithium battery

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By designing a solid electrolyt­e that is rigid on one side and soft on the other, researcher­s have fabricated a lithium-metal battery that completely suppresses dendrite formation — a major safety hazard that can cause fires and shorten battery lifetime.

This design also overcomes a tradeoff that is typically present in these batteries, by simultaneo­usly eliminatin­g dendrite growth and reducing the resistance at the electrode/electrolyt­e interface, phys.org wrote.

Typical methods cannot achieve both of these goals at the same time.

The researcher­s, from professors Yu-guo Guo and Li-jun Wan’s groups of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, have published a paper on the new electrolyt­e in a recent issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Guo said, “We have proposed an asymmetric solid electrolyt­e, which can concurrent­ly meet the requiremen­ts of a dendrite-free lithium anode and a low interface resistance in solid batteries.”

As the researcher­s explain, the tradeoff in lithium batteries occurs because the lithium anode and the cathode have requiremen­ts that are inherently contradict­ory.

While the anode requires a rigid electrolyt­e to block dendrite growth, it is difficult for a rigid electrolyt­e to maintain sufficient contact with the solid cathode, which creates a highly resistive cathode/ electrolyt­e interface.

To address this problem, the researcher­s designed an asymmetric­al solid electrolyt­e, in which each side has a different type of surface.

The side facing the anode is a rigid ceramic material that presses against the lithium anode to discourage dendrite growth.

On the other hand, the side facing the cathode is made of a soft polymer, which allows for a strong interfacia­l connection with the cathode.

The entire electrolyt­e is also very thin, at just under 36 micrometer­s.

In tests, the researcher­s compared batteries with the new electrolyt­e to those with a convention­al electrolyt­e.

After 1,750 hours of cycling, they found that the batteries with the convention­al electrolyt­e exhibited rough morphologi­es indicative of dendrite formation, while those with the new electrolyt­e showed no morphologi­cal changes even after 3,200 hours of cycling, indicating that dendrite growth was effectivel­y eliminated.

Going forward, the researcher­s expect that the dendrite-free lithium batteries will lead to energy-storage systems that combine the high energy and power densities of lithium batteries with improved safety and longer lifetimes due to eliminatin­g dendrite growth.

Guo said, “We plan to design pouch cells with this asymmetric solid electrolyt­e for attaining a high energy density in solid batteries.”

 ??  ?? phys.org A thin asymmetric solid electrolyt­e meets both the requiremen­ts of the lithium metal (blocking dendrite formation) and cathode (enabling low interface resistance).
phys.org A thin asymmetric solid electrolyt­e meets both the requiremen­ts of the lithium metal (blocking dendrite formation) and cathode (enabling low interface resistance).

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