Failure Process During Fast Charging of Lithium Metal Batteries with Weakly Solvating Fluoroether Electrolytes
Yuelang Chen, Zhiao Yu, Huaxin Gong, Wenbo Zhang, Paul E. Rudnicki, Zhuojun Huang, Weilai Yu, Sang Cheol Kim, David Boyle, Philaphon Sayavong, Hasan Çelik, Rong Xu, Yangju Lin, Shaoyang Wang, Jian Qin, Yi Cui, Zhenan Bao
Abstract
While improving the lithium metal (Li) Coulombic efficiency has been a focus for electrolyte design, the performance under high current densities is less studied yet highly relevant for practical applications. Here, we evaluate the charge-rate-dependent cycling stability using three types of weakly solvating fluoroether electrolytes. Although good cycle life was achieved in all three electrolytes under low current densities, they all exhibited a soft shorting behavior above various threshold current densities (between 2 and 5.2 mA cm –2 ). We attributed the current-dependent electrode morphology to both Li growth and residual solid electrolyte interface (rSEI) growth processes. In early cycles, Li morphology guided the formation of rSEI structures. In later cycles, the rSEI structure partially impacted Li growth. Under low current densities, the rSEI was inhomogeneous with large voids for subsequent bulky lithium growth. Under high current densities, the rSEI became more dense, which aggravated the high-surface/volume-ratio Li growth through and on the top of the rSEI. Among the three weakly solvating fluoroether electrolytes, the ones with lower ionic conductivity were observed to short within fewer cycles and at lower charge current densities. Our work suggests that fast ion transport in electrolytes may be a desirable feature for the stable operation at >1C charging in high-energy-density lithium metal batteries.