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Lithium–Graphite Paste: An Interface Compatible Anode for Solid‐State Batteries
Author(s) -
Duan Jian,
Wu Wangyan,
Nolan Adelaide M.,
Wang Tengrui,
Wen Jiayun,
Hu Chenchen,
Mo Yifei,
Luo Wei,
Huang Yunhui
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 10.707
H-Index - 527
eISSN - 1521-4095
pISSN - 0935-9648
DOI - 10.1002/adma.201807243
Subject(s) - materials science , anode , ceramic , lithium (medication) , electrolyte , composite number , wetting , graphite , composite material , tape casting , electrode , medicine , chemistry , endocrinology
Abstract All‐solid‐state batteries (ASSBs) with ceramic‐based solid‐state electrolytes (SSEs) enable high safety that is inaccessible with conventional lithium‐ion batteries. Lithium metal, the ultimate anode with the highest specific capacity, also becomes available with nonflammable SSEs in ASSBs, which offers promising energy density. The rapid development of ASSBs, however, is significantly hampered by the large interfacial resistance as a matched lithium/ceramic interface that is not easy to pursue. Here, a lithium–graphite (Li–C) composite anode is fabricated, which shows a dramatic modification in wettability with garnet SSE. An intimate Li–C/garnet interface is obtained by casting Li–C composite onto garnet‐type SSE, delivering an interfacial resistance as low as 11 Ω cm 2 . As a comparison, pure Li/garnet interface gives a large resistance of 381 Ω cm 2 . Such improvement can be ascribed to the experiment‐measured increased viscosity of Li–C composite and simulation‐verified limited interfacial reaction. The Li–C/garnet/Li–C symmetric cell exhibits stable plating/striping performance with small voltage hysteresis and endures a critical current density up to 1.0 mA cm −2 . The full cell paired with LiFePO 4 shows stable cycle performance, comparable to the cell with liquid electrolyte. The present work demonstrates a promising strategy to develop ceramic‐compatible lithium metal‐based anodes and hence low‐impedance ASSBs.