Abstract
The graphite/Li-metal hybrid anode demonstrates great potential in cycling stability and energy density with designed weakly solvated electrolytes when considering the common issue of solvent co-intercalation and vulnerable interface chemistry with a graphite anode and Li anode, respectively. The weakly solvated electrolytes show weak ion–dipole interaction and promote rapid desolvation but are faced with sluggish ion-transport kinetics, thus inducing high overpotential and Li-dendrite formation. Herein, by applying methyl propionate as a weakly coordinated cosolvent, a loose solvation shell that is regulated by anion–solvent interaction enables weakened Li+–anion interaction while maintaining adequate anion participation, featuring a facilitated bulk ion-transport route via anion dissociation, originally achieving a high ionic conductivity of 17.74 mS cm−1 in weakly solvated electrolytes at 25°C. Consequently, this advanced electrolyte design markedly mitigates concentration polarization and regulates uniform Li deposition, and thus the hybrid anode achieves 99.8% average coulombic efficiency within 1500 cycles at 4C and improved cycling stability at a low N/P ratio of 0.5, making a breakthrough in alkali-metal-ion batteries.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | nwaf065 |
| Journal | National Science Review |
| Volume | 12 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1 Apr 2025 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Li-based battery
- anion–dipole interactions
- interfacial stability
- ion-transport kinetics
- weakly solvated electrolytes
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