Solid-Solution or Intermetallic Compounds: Phase Dependence of the Li-Alloying Reactions for Li-Metal Batteries

Authors:Ye, Yadong; Xie, Huanyu; Yang, Yinghui; Xie, Yuansen; Lu, Yuhao; Wang, Jinxi; Kong, Xianghua; Jin, Song*; Ji, Hengxing*
Source:Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2023, 145(45): 24775-24784.
DOI:10.1021/jacs.3c08711

Summary

Electrochemical Li-alloying reactions with Li-rich alloy phases render a much higher theoretical capacity that is critical for high-energy batteries, and the accompanying phase transition determines the alloying/dealloying reversibility and cycling stability. However, the influence of phase-transition characteristics upon the thermodynamic properties and diffusion kinetic mechanisms among the two categories of alloys, solid-solutions and intermetallic compounds, remains incomplete. Here we investigated three representative Li-alloys: Li-Ag alloy of extended solid-solution regions; Li-Zn alloy of an intermetallic compound with a solid-solution phase of a very narrow window in Li atom concentration; and Li-Al alloy of an intermetallic compound. Solid-solution phases undertake a much lower phase-transition energy barrier than the intermetallic compounds, leading to a considerably higher Li-alloying/dealloying reversibility and cycling stability, which is due to the subtle structural change and chemical potential gradient built up inside of the solid-solution phases. These two effects enable the Li atoms to enter the bulk of the Li-Ag alloy to form a homogeneous alloy phase. The pouch cell of the Li-rich Li20Ag alloy pairs with a LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 cathode under an areal capacity of 3.5 mAh cm(-2) can retain 87% of its initial capacity after 250 cycles with an enhanced Coulombic efficiency of 99.8 +/- 0.1%. While Li-alloying reactions and the alloy phase transitions have always been tightly linked in past studies, our findings provide important guidelines for the intelligent design of components for secondary metal batteries.

  • Institution
    中国科学院

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