Abstract
Rational electrolyte engineering for practical pouch cells remains elusive because the correlation between the cathode/solid-electrolyte interphase layer and cell-level reaction behavior is poorly understood. Here, by combining multiscale characterization and computational modeling, we show that—counter to the conventional perception of polysulfide-incompatible additives—the spontaneous reaction of sparingly solvated polysulfides with Lewis acid additives (LAAs) can induce in situ formation of a homogeneous interphase on thick and tortuous S cathode. Multiscale synchrotron X-ray characterization consistently affirms that such interface design could effectively eliminate the notorious problems of polysulfide shuttle and lithium corrosion and, more importantly, provide an interconnected “ion transport highway” to alleviate the uneven ion transport within the tortuous S cathode. Hence, this design dramatically reduces the reaction heterogeneity of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) pouch cells under lean electrolyte conditions. This work resolves controversy around the role of polysulfide-incompatible additives in high-energy Li-S pouch cells and highlights the importance of suppressing reaction heterogeneity for practical batteries.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 3397-3411 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Joule |
Volume | 8 |
Issue number | 12 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 18 2024 |
Keywords
- cathode-electrolyte interphase
- cell-level diagnosis
- electrolyte engineering
- high-energy batteries
- in situ synchrotron characterizations
- interphase analysis
- lithium metal anode
- lithium-sulfur batteries
- pouch cells
- solid-electrolyte interphase
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Energy