In Situ Polymerization Facilitating Practical High-Safety Quasi-Solid-State Batteries

Xinyu Rui, Rui Hua, Dongsheng Ren*, Feng Qiu, Yu Wu, Yue Qiu, Yuqiong Mao, Yi Guo, Gaolong Zhu*, Xiang Liu*, Yike Gao, Chang Zhao, Xuning Feng, Languang Lu, Minggao Ouyang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Quasi-solid-state batteries (QSSBs) are gaining widespread attention as a promising solution to improve battery safety performance. However, the safety improvement and the underlying mechanisms of QSSBs remain elusive. Herein, a novel strategy combining high-safety ethylene carbonate-free liquid electrolyte and in situ polymerization technique is proposed to prepare practical QSSBs. The Ah-level QSSBs with LiNi0.83Co0.11Mn0.06O2 cathode and graphite–silicon anode demonstrate significantly improved safety features without sacrificing electrochemical performance. As evidenced by accelerating rate calorimetry tests, the QSSBs exhibit increased self-heating temperature and onset temperature (T2), and decreased temperature rise rate during thermal runaway (TR). The T2 has a maximum increase of 48.4 °C compared to the conventional liquid batteries. Moreover, the QSSBs do not undergo TR until 180 °C (even 200 °C) during the hot-box tests, presenting significant improvement compared to the liquid batteries that run into TR at 130 °C. Systematic investigations show that the in situ formed polymer skeleton effectively mitigates the exothermic reactions between lithium salts and lithiated anode, retards the oxygen release from cathode, and inhibits crosstalk reactions between cathode and anode at elevated temperatures. The findings offer an innovative solution for practical high-safety QSSBs and open up a new sight for building safer high-energy-density batteries.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvanced Materials
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2024

Keywords

  • battery safety
  • high-safety electrolytes
  • in situ polymerization
  • polymer electrolytes
  • quasi-solid-state batteries

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