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Lithium Difluorophosphate as a Dendrite-Suppressing Additive for Lithium Metal Batteries
Author(s) -
Pengcheng Shi,
Linchao Zhang,
Hongfa Xiang,
Xin Liang,
Yi Sun,
Wu Xu
Publication year - 2018
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.8b05185
Subject(s) - electrolyte , faraday efficiency , materials science , dendrite (mathematics) , anode , lithium (medication) , lithium metal , interphase , metal , chemical engineering , inorganic chemistry , electrode , metallurgy , chemistry , medicine , geometry , mathematics , biology , engineering , genetics , endocrinology
The notorious lithium (Li) dendrites and the low Coulombic efficiency (CE) of Li anode are two major obstacles to the practical utilization of Li metal batteries (LMBs). Introducing a dendrite-suppressing additive into nonaqueous electrolytes is one of the facile and effective solutions to promote the commercialization of LMBs. Herein, Li difluorophosphate (LiPO 2 F 2, LiDFP) is used as an electrolyte additive to inhibit Li dendrite growth by forming a vigorous and stable solid electrolyte interphase film on metallic Li anode. Moreover, the Li CE can be largely improved from 84.6% of the conventional LiPF 6 -based electrolyte to 95.2% by the addition of an optimal concentration of LiDFP at 0.15 M. The optimal LiDFP-containing electrolyte can allow the Li||Li symmetric cells to cycle stably for more than 500 and 200 h at 0.5 and 1.0 mA cm -2 , respectively, much longer than the control electrolyte without LiDFP additive. Meanwhile, this LiDFP-containing electrolyte also plays an important role in enhancing the cycling stability of the Li||LiNi 1/3 Co 1/3 Mn 1/3 O 2 cells with a moderately high mass loading of 9.7 mg cm -2 . These results demonstrate that LiDFP has extensive application prospects as a dendrite-suppressing additive in advanced LMBs.

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