Decoupling Interfacial Stability and Ion Transport in Solid Polymer Electrolyte by Tailored Ligand Chemistry for Lithium Metal Battery

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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Author(s)

  • Yingmin Jin
  • Yumeng Li
  • Mengyu Fu
  • Yuxin Gong
  • Lei Lei
  • Yong Zhang
  • Yueping Xiong

Related Research Unit(s)

Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Article number2421880
Journal / PublicationAdvanced Functional Materials
Publication statusOnline published - 29 Dec 2024

Abstract

Achieving fast ion transport kinetics and high interfacial stability simultaneously is challenging for polymer electrolytes in solid-state lithium batteries, as the coordination environment optimal for Li+ conduction struggles to generate desirable interphase chemistry. Herein, the adjustable property of organic ligands is exploited in metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) to develop a hierarchical composite electrolyte, incorporating heterogeneous and spatially confined MOF nanofillers into a poly-1,3-dioxolane matrix. The defect-engineered University of Oslo-66 MOFs (UiO-66d) with tailored Lewis acidity can separate ion pairs and optimize Li+ migration through weakened solvation effects, thereby enhancing ion conductivity by over sixfold (0.85 mS cm−1@25 °C). At the lithium anode side, a densified University of Oslo-67 MOFs (UiO-67) layer with conjugated π electrons facilitates anion participation in the solvation sheath, promoting anion reduction and thereby forming LiF/Li3N-dominated solid electrolyte interphase for isotropic Li deposition. The as-assembled Li||LiFePO4 full cell delivers superior cycling stability with 92.7% of capacity retained over 2000 cycles at 2 C. Notably, the developed electrolyte demonstrates excellent compatibility with high-voltage cathodes, achieving 80% capacity retention with LiNi0.5Co0.2Mn0.3O2 over 630 cycles. This work provides valuable insights into decoupling transport and interfacial challenges in solid-state lithium batteries, paving the way for advanced battery technologies. © 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

Research Area(s)

  • hierarchical ligand engineering, in situ polymerized electrolyte, SEI reconstruction, solvation structure, UiO MOFs

Citation Format(s)