Chemical Crossover Accelerates Degradation of Lithium Electrode in High Energy Density Rechargeable Lithium–Oxygen Batteries

Author:

Matsuda Shoichi123ORCID,Ono Manai1,Asahina Hitoshi12,Kimura Shin12,Mizuki Emiko1,Yasukawa Eiki12,Yamaguchi Shoji12,Kubo Yoshimi12,Uosaki Kohei12

Affiliation:

1. Center for Green Research on Energy and Environmental Materials National Institute for Material Science 1‐1 Namiki Tsukuba Ibaraki 305–0044 Japan

2. NIMS‐SoftBank Advanced Technologies Development Center National Institute for Material Science 1‐1 Namiki Tsukuba Ibaraki 305–0044 Japan

3. Center for Advanced Battery Collaboration Center for Green Research on Energy and Environmental Materials National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS) Tsukuba Ibaraki 305–0044 Japan

Abstract

AbstractLithium‐oxygen batteries (LOBs) are promising next‐generation rechargeable battery candidates due to theoretical energy densities that exceed those of conventional lithium‐ion batteries. Although LOB with high cell level energy density has been demonstrated under lean electrolyte and high areal capacity conditions, their cycle life is still poor, and the cell degradation mechanism remains unclear. In the present study, by use of a three‐electrode electrochemical setup and in situ MS analytical techniques, it is revealed that the reaction efficiency of the negative lithium electrode largely decreases due to chemical crossover from the positive oxygen electrode side, such as H2O and CO2. Based on this mechanistic understanding, a LOB with an ultra‐lightweight flexible ceramic‐based solid‐state separator with 6 µm thickness that effectively protects the lithium electrode against chemical crossover without diminishing the energy density of LOBs is fabricated. Notably, a 400 Wh kg−1class LOB exhibits a stable discharge/charged process for >20 cycles. The strategy demonstrated in this study sheds light on the direction for the practical implementation of LOBs with high energy densities and long cycle lives.

Funder

National Institute for Materials Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Materials Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

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