posted on 2022-10-10, 11:33authored byDavid
T. Boyle, Yuzhang Li, Allen Pei, Rafael A. Vilá, Zewen Zhang, Philaphon Sayavong, Mun Sek Kim, William Huang, Hongxia Wang, Yunzhi Liu, Rong Xu, Robert Sinclair, Jian Qin, Zhenan Bao, Yi Cui
Poor fast-charge capabilities limit
the usage of rechargeable
Li
metal anodes. Understanding the connection between charging rate,
electroplating mechanism, and Li morphology could enable fast-charging
solutions. Here, we develop a combined electroanalytical and nanoscale
characterization approach to resolve the current-dependent regimes
of Li plating mechanisms and morphology. Measurement of Li<sup>+</sup> transport through the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) shows that
low currents induce plating at buried Li||SEI interfaces, but high
currents initiate SEI-breakdown and plating at fresh Li||electrolyte
interfaces. The latter pathway can induce uniform growth of {110}-faceted
Li at extremely high currents, suggesting ion-transport limitations
alone are insufficient to predict Li morphology. At battery relevant
fast-charging rates, SEI-breakdown above a critical current density
produces detrimental morphology and poor cyclability. Thus, prevention
of both SEI-breakdown and slow ion-transport in the electrolyte is
essential. This mechanistic insight can inform further electrolyte
engineering and customization of fast-charging protocols for Li metal
batteries.