Influence of Aliovalent Cation Substitution and Mechanical Compression on Li-Ion Conductivity and Diffusivity in Argyrodite Solid Electrolytes

Author(s):  
Parvin Adeli ◽  
J. David Bazak ◽  
Ashfia Huq ◽  
Gillian R. Goward ◽  
Linda F. Nazar
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (18) ◽  
pp. 6972-6979 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Lopez-Bermudez ◽  
Wolfgang G. Zeier ◽  
Shiliang Zhou ◽  
Anna J. Lehner ◽  
Jerry Hu ◽  
...  

The development of new frameworks for solid electrolytes exhibiting fast Li-ion diffusion is critical for enabling new energy storage technologies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 1164-1173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhen Li ◽  
Zhi-Wei Liu ◽  
Zhen-Jie Mu ◽  
Chen Cao ◽  
Zeyu Li ◽  
...  

Two new imidazolium-based cationic COFs were synthesized and employed as all-solid electrolytes, and exhibited high lithium ion conductivity at high temperature. The assembled Li-ion battery displays preferable battery performance at 353 K.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Dawson ◽  
Saiful Islam

<div>The discovery of the lithium superionic conductor Li10GeP2S12 (LGPS) has led to significant research activity on solid electrolytes for high-performance and safe solid-state batteries. LGPS exhibits a remarkably high room-temperature Li-ion conductivity of 12 mS/cm, comparable to</div><div>that of the liquid electrolytes used in current Li-ion batteries. Here, we predict that nanosizing of LGPS can be used to further enhance its already outstanding Li-ion conductivity. By utilizing state-of-the-art nanoscale molecular dynamics techniques, we are able to simulate the Li-ion conductivities of nanocrystalline LGPS systems with average grain sizes from 10 to 2 nm. Our results reveal that the Li-ion conductivity of LGPS increases with decreasing grain volume. For the smallest nanometric grain size, the Li-ion conductivity at room temperature is three times higher that of the bulk system. These findings reveal that nanosizing LGPS and related solid electrolytes could be an effective approach for enhancing their Li-ion conductivity.</div>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Dawson ◽  
Saiful Islam

<div>The discovery of the lithium superionic conductor Li10GeP2S12 (LGPS) has led to significant research activity on solid electrolytes for high-performance and safe solid-state batteries. LGPS exhibits a remarkably high room-temperature Li-ion conductivity of 12 mS/cm, comparable to</div><div>that of the liquid electrolytes used in current Li-ion batteries. Here, we predict that nanosizing of LGPS can be used to further enhance its already outstanding Li-ion conductivity. By utilizing state-of-the-art nanoscale molecular dynamics techniques, we are able to simulate the Li-ion conductivities of nanocrystalline LGPS systems with average grain sizes from 10 to 2 nm. Our results reveal that the Li-ion conductivity of LGPS increases with decreasing grain volume. For the smallest nanometric grain size, the Li-ion conductivity at room temperature is three times higher that of the bulk system. These findings reveal that nanosizing LGPS and related solid electrolytes could be an effective approach for enhancing their Li-ion conductivity.</div>


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (30) ◽  
pp. 15103-15109
Author(s):  
Maho Harada ◽  
Hayami Takeda ◽  
Shinya Suzuki ◽  
Koki Nakano ◽  
Naoto Tanibata ◽  
...  

Experimental Bayesian optimization for Li ion conductivity in NASICON-type LiZr2(PO4)3.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (5) ◽  
pp. 4941-4948 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valerio Gulino ◽  
Laura Barberis ◽  
Peter Ngene ◽  
Marcello Baricco ◽  
Petra E. de Jongh

2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (29) ◽  
pp. 15346-15354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilmer Bucheli ◽  
Kamel Arbi ◽  
Jesús Sanz ◽  
Dmitry Nuzhnyy ◽  
Stanislav Kamba ◽  
...  

Broadband impedance spectroscopy and NMR measurements experimentally prove that strong near constant loss contribution to the conductivity is not mandatory to present the highest Li ion conductivity in solid electrolytes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Liu ◽  
Ernst van Eck ◽  
Swapna Ganapathy ◽  
Marnix Wagemaker

Abstract Development of commercial solid-state batteries so far been hindered by the individual limitations of inorganic and organic solid-electrolytes, motivating hybrid concepts. However, room-temperature performance of hybrid-solid electrolytes is still insufficient in terms of ion conductivity, where especially the role and impact of the inorganic and organic interphases is largely unexplored. A key challenge is to assess the Li-ion transport over the interfaces directly and relate this to the surface chemistry. Here the lithium-ion conductivity in hybrid-solid electrolytes, the interface structure and Li+ interface transport was investigated by state-of-art solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance methodologies. In a hybrid-solid Polyethylene oxide polymer – inorganic electrolyte, two representative types of ionic liquids, having a different miscibility with the polymer, were used as a benchmark to tailor the local environment at the interface between the inorganic and organic solid electrolytes species. The poor miscibility ionic liquid wets the polymer-inorganic interface and raises the local polarizability, thereby lowering the diffusional barrier, which activates the high conductivity of the inorganic solid-electrolyte, resulting in and overall room temperature conductivity of 0.25 mS/cm. A very high critical current density of 0.25 mA/cm2 versus a Li-metal anode is achieved, demonstrating improved stability, and a LiFePO4 – Li-metal full solid-state cell can be cycled at room temperature at an Coulombic efficiency of 99.9%. The local interface environment between the solid electrolyte phases in hybrid solid electrolytes, is thus demonstrated to be the bottleneck and tailoring the interface properties appears a viable route towards the design of highly conducting hybrid-solid electrolyte concepts.


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