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Effects of Applied Interfacial Pressure on Li-Metal Cycling Performance and Morphology in 4 M LiFSI in DME
Author(s) -
Katharine L. Harrison,
Subrahmanyam Goriparti,
Laura C. Merrill,
Daniel Long,
Benjamin Warren,
Scott Alan Roberts,
Brian Perdue,
Zachary Casias,
Paul Cuillier,
Brad Boyce,
Katherine L. Jungjohann
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.1c06488
Subject(s) - materials science , anode , faraday efficiency , electrolyte , chemical engineering , scanning electron microscope , gravimetric analysis , lithium (medication) , composite material , electrode , medicine , chemistry , organic chemistry , endocrinology , engineering
Lithium-metal anodes can theoretically enable 10× higher gravimetric capacity than conventional graphite anodes. However, Li-metal anode cycling has proven difficult due to porous and dendritic morphologies, extensive parasitic solid electrolyte interphase reactions, and formation of dead Li. We systematically investigate the effects of applied interfacial pressure on Li-metal anode cycling performance and morphology in the recently developed and highly efficient 4 M lithium bis(fluorosulfonyl)imide in 1,2-dimethoxyethane electrolyte. We present cycling, morphology, and impedance data at a current density of 0.5 mA/cm 2 and a capacity of 2 mAh/cm 2 at applied interfacial pressures of 0, 0.01, 0.1, 1, and 10 MPa. Cryo-focused ion beam milling and cryo-scanning electron microscopy imaging in cross section reveal that increasing the applied pressure during Li deposition from 0 to 10 MPa leads to greater than a fivefold reduction in thickness (and therefore volume) of the deposited Li. This suggests that pressure during cycling can have a profound impact on the practical volumetric energy density for Li-metal anodes. A "goldilocks zone" of cell performance is observed at intermediate pressures of 0.1-1 MPa. Increasing pressure from 0 to 1 MPa generally improves cell-to-cell reproducibility, cycling stability, and Coulombic efficiency. However, the highest pressure (10 MPa) results in high cell overpotential and evidence of soft short circuits, which likely result from transport limitations associated with increased pressure causing local pore closure in the separator. All cells exhibit at least some signs of cycling instability after 50 cycles when cycled to 2 mAh/cm 2 with thin 50 μm Li counter electrodes, though instability decreases with increasing pressure. In contrast, cells cycled to only 1 mAh/cm 2 perform well for 50 cycles, indicating that capacity plays an important role in cycling stability.

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