Investigation of Glass-Ceramic Lithium Thiophosphate Solid Electrolytes Using NMR and Neutron Scattering

Mater Today Phys. 2021 Nov:21:100478. doi: 10.1016/j.mtphys.2021.100478. Epub 2021 Jul 7.

Abstract

Solid-state Li batteries require solid electrolytes which have high Li+ conductivity and good chemical/mechanical compatibility with Li metal anodes and high energy cathodes. Structure/function correlations which relate local bonding to macroscopic properties are needed to guide development of new solid electrolyte materials. This study combines diffraction measurements with solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (ssNMR) and neutron pair distribution function (nPDF) analysis to probe the short-range vs. long-range structure of glass-ceramic Li3PS4-based solid electrolytes. This work demonstrates how different synthesis conditions (e.g., solvent selection and thermal processing) affect the resulting polyanionic network. More specifically, structures with high P coordination numbers (e.g., PS4 3- and P2S7 4-) correlate with higher Li+ mobility compared to other polyanions (e.g., (PS3)n n- chains and P2S6 4-). Overall, this work demonstrates how ssNMR and nPDF can be used to draw key structure/function correlations for solid-state superionic conductors.

Keywords: NMR; lithium thiophosphate; pair distribution function; solid electrolytes; solvent-mediated synthesis.