posted on 2019-01-24, 00:00authored byHansen Wang, Yuzhang Li, Yanbin Li, Yayuan Liu, Dingchang Lin, Cheng Zhu, Guangxu Chen, Ankun Yang, Kai Yan, Hao Chen, Yangying Zhu, Jun Li, Jin Xie, Jinwei Xu, Zewen Zhang, Rafael Vilá, Allen Pei, Kecheng Wang, Yi Cui
Lithium
(Li) metal has long been considered the “holy grail”
of battery anode chemistry but is plagued by low efficiency and poor
safety due to its high chemical reactivity and large volume fluctuation,
respectively. Here we introduce a new host of wrinkled graphene cage
(WGC) for Li metal. Different from recently reported amorphous carbon
spheres, WGC show highly improved mechanical stability, better Li
ion conductivity, and excellent solid electrolyte interphase (SEI)
for continuous robust Li metal protection. At low areal capacities,
Li metal is preferentially deposited inside the graphene cage. Cryogenic
electron microscopy characterization shows that a uniform and stable
SEI forms on the WGC surface that can shield the Li metal from direct
exposure to electrolyte. With increased areal capacities, Li metal
is plated densely and homogeneously into the outer pore spaces between
graphene cages with no dendrite growth or volume change. As a result,
a high Coulombic efficiency (CE) of ∼98.0% was achieved under
0.5 mA/cm2 and 1–10 mAh/cm2 in commercial
carbonate electrolytes, and a CE of 99.1% was realized with high-concentration
electrolytes under 0.5 mA/cm2 and 3 mAh/cm2.
Full cells using WGC electrodes with prestored Li paired with Li iron
phosphate showed greatly improved cycle lifetime. With 10 mAh/cm2 Li metal deposition, the WGC/Li composite anode was
able to provide a high specific capacity of ∼2785 mAh/g. With
its roll-to-roll compatible fabrication procedure, WGC serves as a
highly promising material for the practical realization of Li metal
anodes in next-generation high energy density secondary batteries.