Issue 12, 2020

4 V room-temperature all-solid-state sodium battery enabled by a passivating cathode/hydroborate solid electrolyte interface

Abstract

Designing solid electrolytes for all-solid-state-batteries that can withstand the extreme electrochemical conditions in contact with an alkali metal anode and a high-voltage cathode is challenging, especially when the battery is cycled beyond 4 V. Here we demonstrate that a hydroborate solid electrolyte Na4(CB11H12)2(B12H12), built from two types of cage-like anions with different oxidative stability, can effectively passivate the interface to a 4 V-class cathode and prevent impedance growth during cycling. We show that [B12H12]2− anions decompose below 4.2 V vs. Na+/Na to form a passivating interphase layer, while [CB11H12] anions remain intact, providing sufficient ionic conductivity across the layer. Our interface engineering strategy enables the first demonstration of a 4 V-class hydroborate-based all-solid-state battery combining a sodium metal anode and a cobalt-free Na3(VOPO4)2F cathode without any artificial protective coating. When cycled to 4.15 V vs. Na+/Na, the cells feature a discharge capacity of 104 mA h g−1 at C/10 and 99 mA h g−1 at C/5, and an excellent capacity and energy retention of 78% and 76%, respectively, after 800 cycles at C/5 at <0.2 MPa at room temperature. Increasing the pressure to 3.2 MPa enables a discharge capacity of 117 mA h g−1 at C/10 with a mass loading of 8.0 mg cm−2, corresponding to an areal capacity close to 1.0 mA h cm−2. The cell holds the highest average discharge cell voltage of 3.8 V and specific energy per cathode active material among all-solid-state sodium batteries reported so far, emphasizing the potential of hydroborates as electrolytes for a competitive all-solid-state battery technology.

Graphical abstract: 4 V room-temperature all-solid-state sodium battery enabled by a passivating cathode/hydroborate solid electrolyte interface

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 May 2020
Accepted
01 Oct 2020
First published
02 Nov 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Energy Environ. Sci., 2020,13, 5048-5058

4 V room-temperature all-solid-state sodium battery enabled by a passivating cathode/hydroborate solid electrolyte interface

R. Asakura, D. Reber, L. Duchêne, S. Payandeh, A. Remhof, H. Hagemann and C. Battaglia, Energy Environ. Sci., 2020, 13, 5048 DOI: 10.1039/D0EE01569E

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