Covalently Anchoring an Ultrathin Conformal SiOx Coating on Polyolefin Separator for Enhanced Lithium Metal Battery Performance

Yulin Zhang, Jianhao Lu, Zhaoqing Jin, Xintai Xie, Lei Wei, Pengfei Li, Yao Zhao, Jiachang Zhao, Caihong Xu, Weikun Wang*, Zongbo Zhang*

*此作品的通讯作者

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Surface modification of separators with inorganic oxide ceramics such as SiOx, Al2O3, and TiO2 has emerged as a promising strategy to suppress lithium dendrite growth in lithium metal batteries, thereby enhancing safety and extending battery life. However, the binder-dependent nature of these modifications often leads to increased separator thickness and a heightened risk of detachment during lithium plating, ultimately compromising both battery performance and energy density. In this study, a conformal, ultrathin (≈20 nm) SiOx coating with strong covalent bonding is grown on a porous separator through a liquid polymer-derived method. Compared to the pristine polyethylene (PE) separators, this SiOx-co-PE separator exhibits significantly improved electrolyte wettability, mechanical strength, and thermal stability without any increase in thickness, leading to vastly enhanced cycling stability and dendrite resistance in cells with Li metal anodes. In a practical demonstration, a 402.9 Wh·kg−1 Li-S pouch cell, with a high sulfur loading of 9 mg cm−2 and a low E/S ratio of 3.3 µL mg−1, is assembled with the SiOx-co-PE separator, achieving stable cycling over 70 cycles at 25 °C.

源语言英语
文章编号2417160
期刊Advanced Functional Materials
35
11
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 11 3月 2025
已对外发布

指纹

探究 'Covalently Anchoring an Ultrathin Conformal SiOx Coating on Polyolefin Separator for Enhanced Lithium Metal Battery Performance' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。

引用此

Zhang, Y., Lu, J., Jin, Z., Xie, X., Wei, L., Li, P., Zhao, Y., Zhao, J., Xu, C., Wang, W., & Zhang, Z. (2025). Covalently Anchoring an Ultrathin Conformal SiOx Coating on Polyolefin Separator for Enhanced Lithium Metal Battery Performance. Advanced Functional Materials, 35(11), 文章 2417160. https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202417160