Electrolyte and interphase engineering through solvation structure regulation for stable lithium metal batteries
Hai Su, Haikuo Zhang, Zifeng Chen, Mengjie Li, Jiwei Zhao, Haiyan Xun, Jie Sun, Yunhua Xu
Abstract
Lithium metal batteries (LMBs) are considered to be one of the most promising high-energy-density battery systems. However, their practical application in carbonate electrolytes is hampered by lithium dendrite growth, resulting in short cycle life. Herein, an electrolyte regulation strategy is developed to improve the cyclability of LMBs in carbonate electrolytes by introducing LiNO 3 using trimethyl phosphate with a slightly higher donor number compared to NO 3 − as a solubilizer . This not only allows the formaion of Li + -coordinated NO 3 − but also achieves the regulation of electrolyte solvation structures, leading to the formation of robust and ion-conductive solid-electrolyte interphase films with inorganic-rich inner and organic-rich outer layers on the Li metal anodes . As a result, high Coulombic efficiency of 99.1% and stable plating/stripping cycling of Li metal anode in Li||Cu cells were realized. Furthermore, excellent performance was also demonstrated in Li||LiNi 0.83 Co 0.11 Mn 0.06 O 2 (NCM83) full cells and Cu||NCM83 anode-free cells using high mass-loading cathodes. This work provides a simple interphase engineering strategy through regulating the electrolyte solvation structures for high-energy-density LMBs.