Superior Fast-Charging Lithium-Ion Batteries Enabled by the High-Speed Solid-State Lithium Transport of an Intermetallic Cu6 Sn5 Network

Adv Mater. 2022 Aug;34(32):e2202688. doi: 10.1002/adma.202202688. Epub 2022 Jul 7.

Abstract

Superior fast charging is a desirable capability of lithium-ion batteries, which can make electric vehicles a strong competition to traditional fuel vehicles. However, the slow transport of solvated lithium ions in liquid electrolytes is a limiting factor. Here, a Lix Cu6 Sn5 intermetallic network is reported to address this issue. Based on electrochemical analysis and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy mapping, it is demonstrated that the reported intermetallic network can form a high-speed solid-state lithium transport matrix throughout the electrode, which largely reduces the lithium-ion-concentration polarization effect in the graphite anode. Employing this design, superior fast-charging graphite/lithium cobalt oxide full cells are fabricated and tested under strict electrode conditions. At the charging rate of 6 C, the fabricated full cells show a capacity of 145 mAh g-1 with an extraordinary capacity retention of 96.6%. In addition, the full cell also exhibits good electrochemical stability at a high charging rate of 2 C over 100 cycles (96.0% of capacity retention) in comparison to traditional graphite-anode-based cells (86.1% of capacity retention). This work presents a new strategy for fast-charging lithium-ion batteries on the basis of high-speed solid-state lithium transport in intermetallic alloy hosts.

Keywords: fast-charging batteries; graphite/lithium cobalt oxide full cell; intermetallic Cu 6Sn 5 networks; lithium-ion batteries; solid-state Li transport.