Open Access Article
Nguyen
Thi Minh Nguyet
ab,
Tran Viet
Toan
bc,
Luu Tuan
Anh
bc,
Luong
Thi Quynh Anh
bc,
Tran Anh
Tu
abc and
Nguyen Huu Huy
Phuc
*abc
aVNU-HCM Key Laboratory for Material Technologies, Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology (HCMUT), 268 Ly Thuong Kiet Str., Dist. 10, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. E-mail: nhhphuc@hcmut.edu.vn
bVietnam National University Ho Chi Minh City, Linh Trung Ward, Thu Duc Dist., Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
cFaculty of Materials Technology, Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology (HCMUT), 268 Ly Thuong Kiet Str., Dist. 10, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
First published on 7th August 2024
Li2+xInxZn1−xCl4+2x (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.5) solid electrolytes were synthesized using a mechanochemical method. XRD indicated that the prepared samples had a cubic structure. The lattice parameter was dependent on the value of x. The cold-pressed pellet of the sample with x = 0.45 had an ionic conductivity of about 2.4 × 10−4 S cm−1 at 25 °C and an activation energy of about 0.446 eV. The equivalence circuit and distribution of the relaxation time indicated that grain boundary resistance was the main component of the total resistance of the sample. The hot-pressed pellet of the sample with x = 0.45 had an ionic conductivity of about 9.2 × 10−4 S cm−1 at 25 °C and an activation energy of about 0.300 eV, which were comparable with those of the reported halide-based solid electrolyte. The solid-state cell employing the sample with x = 0.45 as a solid electrolyte and bare LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2 as the active material showed good cyclic ability at room temperature.
The biggest disadvantage of an oxide solid electrolyte is the very high sintering temperature, about 1000 °C, to bind the oxide particles. Meanwhile, the inter-particle adhesion of halide and sulfide solid electrolytes can take place under medium pressure (about 100–700 MPa) and room temperature. This is a huge advantage when applied to mass production. The sulfide solid electrolyte is unstable when in contact with the positive electrode active material that has a voltage greater than 2.80 V vs. Li/Li+; therefore, it is necessary to create a thin film to separate the active material and the sulfidic solid electrolyte to prevent the reaction between the two materials.3 In contrast, halide electrolytes (F−, Cl−, Br−) are stable at high voltages, making them suitable for use in the positive electrode of ASS LIBs.
Halide solid electrolytes were studied in the early 1930s with LiI being the typical research object.4 In 2018, high ionic conductivity Li3YCl6/Li3YBr6 materials were successfully synthesized and their application in ASS batteries was reported.5 The synthesis of Li3InCl6 using an aqueous solution was first reported in 2019.6 Since then, several members of this group have been extensively studied and reported.7,8 The monoclinic Li2ZrCl6 prepared at a high temperature exhibited a low Li+ conductivity of 5.7 × 10−6 S cm−1, but the mechano-chemically prepared hexagonal close-packed Li2ZrCl6 showed a moderate Li+ conductivity of 4.0 × 10−4 S cm−1 at 30 °C.9 It was reported that the ionic conductivity of monoclinic Li2ZrCl6 was improved from 7.1 × 10−6 to 2.1 × 10−3 S cm−1 at 30 °C due to the aliovalent substitution of Zr by In.10 High-energy ball-milling derived Mn2+ doped Li2ZrCl6 had an ionic conductivity of 8.0 × 10−4 S cm−1 at room temperature, which was higher than that of bare Li2ZrCl6.11 The disordered cubic spinel Li1.9Sc0.7Cl4, Li2.08Sc0.64Cl4 and Li2Sc2/3Cl4 showed high ionic conductivities of 1.09 × 10−3, 1.22 × 10−3 and 1.5 × 10−3 S cm−1, respectively, at 30 °C.12 The mechanochemically synthesized LiAlCl4 had a monoclinic structure and exhibited an ionic conductivity of about 2.1 × 10−5 S cm−1 at room temperature, which was about 20 times higher than the reported value of the material prepared by solid state reaction at a high temperature.13
Most of the reported halide solid electrolytes are based on rare earth elements.14–17 Li3TiCl6, LiAlX4 (X = Cl, Br, I) and Li2ZnCl4 are the reported solid electrolytes that employed earth-abundant elements.18–21 Li2ZnCl4 had a cubic spinel structure at low temperature and an olivine structure at temperatures higher than 215 °C.21 The ionic conductivity of olivine Li2ZnCl4 was about 2.0 × 10−4 S cm−1 at 280 °C. The ionic conductivity of cubic spinel Li2ZnCl4 was about 10−7 S cm−1 at 100 °C. Therefore, the improvement of the ionic conductivity of cubic Li2ZnCl4 is an interesting issue. This study aimed to prepare a cubic Li2+xInxZn1−xCl4+2x (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.5) solid electrolyte using mechanochemical synthesis. The as-prepared samples were subsequently heat-treated at 170 °C for 4 h in a dry argon atmosphere. The samples had a cubic structure. The resistance of cubic Li2ZnCl4 was too large to be measured at room temperature. The ionic conductivity of the sample Li2.45In0.45Zn0.55Cl4.9 (x = 0.45, hot-pressed) was about 9.2 × 10−4 S cm−1 at 25 °C. The ASS cell employing Li2.45In0.45Zn0.55Cl4.9 solid electrolyte and LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2 as an active material showed good cyclic ability at room temperature.
The structures of the prepared powders were characterized by XRD (Bruker X8) and thermogravimetry–differential thermal analysis (TG–DTA; EVO II, Rigaku). TG–DTA data were obtained in a dry nitrogen flow at a heating rate of 5 K min−1. The total resistivity of the prepared samples was recorded using alternating current impedance spectroscopy (PGSTAT302N, Autolab, Switzerland) from 1 MHz to 10 Hz under a dry N2 flow. The solid electrolyte pellets were made as previously reported.22
LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2 (MTI) (hereafter denoted as NCM) without any coating was employed as an active material in an ASS cell to study the stability of the prepared solid electrolyte. The positive electrode composites were prepared by manually mixing NCM, the sample Li2.45In0.45Zn0.55Cl4.9 (x = 0.45, heat-treated at 170 °C), and Ketjen Black with a weight ratio of 68.5
:
28.5
:
3.0 using an agate mortar. The ASS cell composed of the prepared electrode composite (about 11.0 mg), Li6PS5Cl (about 100 mg) as separator, and a Li–In negative electrode was fabricated using the reported procedure.23 About 100 mg of Li6PS5Cl were pressed in a polycarbonate mold (diameter of 10 mm) under 100 MPa for 1 min. About 11.0 mg of the electrode composite was dispersed on one side of the Li6PS5Cl layer and pressed under 330 MPa for 5 min. A piece of In metal foil (Aldrich, 99.995%, 8 mm diameter, 0.1 mm thickness) was placed on the other side of the Li6PS5Cl, followed by attaching a piece of Li foil (Aldrich, 99.999%, 4 mm diameter, 0.1 mm thickness) on the In foil. The cell was then pressed at 30 MPa for 30 sec. Stainless-steel rods with a diameter of 10 mm were used as a current collector (electrode area 0.785 cm2). The cell was rested at room temperature for 2 h before the cycling test. Galvanostatic testing of the cells involved cycles in CC mode (1C = 200 mA h g−1) using a VMP3 (BioLogic) to study the stability of the sample with x = 0.45. The cut-off voltages were 3.70 and 2.40 V vs. Li–In. All electrochemical measurements were recorded at room temperature.
All the experiments were carried out in a glove box (Ar-filled, [H2O] < 0.1 ppm) or an airtight sample holder.
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| Fig. 1 (a) XRD patterns of the as-prepared Li2+xInxZn1−xCl4+2x (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.5) samples; (b) enlargement of Fig. 1a. | ||
Fig. 2a illustrates the TG-DTA curves of the Li2.4In0.4Zn0.6Cl4.8 sample. The TG curve showed only about 0.1% weight loss due to the desorption of adsorbed water on the sample's surface. There was a small endothermic peak from about 50 °C to 100 °C indicating the elimination of physically adsorbed water molecules. A sharp exothermic peak located at about 150 °C indicated the crystallization of the sample. The peak started at about 140 °C and ended at about 170 °C. Thus, the sample Li2.4In0.4Zn0.6Cl4.8 was heated at 130 and 170 °C for 4 h to study the effect of heat treatment on its ionic conductivity at room temperature. The temperature dependence of the ionic conductivity of the Li2.4In0.4Zn0.6Cl4.8 solid electrolyte heat-treated at different temperatures is depicted in Fig. 2b. The ionic conductivities at 25 °C of the as-prepared sample, the sample heat treated at 130 °C and the sample heat treated at 170 °C were about 2.0 × 10−5, 3.2 × 10−5 and 5.6 × 10−5 S cm−1, respectively. Therefore, the other samples were also treated at 170 °C for 4 h.
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| Fig. 2 (a) TG-DTA curves of the Li2.4In0.4Zn0.6Cl4.8 sample; (b) temperature dependence of the ionic conductivity of the Li2.4In0.4Zn0.6Cl4.8 solid electrolyte heat-treated at different temperatures. | ||
Fig. 3 shows XRD patterns of Li2+xInxZn1−xCl4+2x samples (0.2 ≤ x ≤ 0.45) after heat-treatment at 170 °C for 4 h and the sample with x = 0.45 after ball milling (x = 0.45 BM). The patterns illustrate that the cubic structure of the prepared samples was still preserved after heating at 170 °C. It can be seen that the patterns of the sample with x = 0.45 before and after heat treatment were similar; however, the peaks of the heat-treated sample were sharper than those of the as-prepared sample. This indicated that the crystalline size increased after the heat treatment process. The patterns had three main peaks at 2θ ≈ 29.64, 34.37, 49.49, 58.82 and 61.77°. The lattice parameters were obtained at each diffraction angle θ using the Bragg equation.
nλ = 2d sin θ | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
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| Fig. 3 XRD patterns of Li2+xInxZn1−xCl4+2x (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.5) samples after heat-treatment at 170 °C for 4 h and the sample with x = 0.45 after ball milling (x = 0.45 BM). | ||
The results obtained from (1) and (2) confirmed that the prepared samples had a cubic structure and the mentioned peaks were assigned to the [222], [400], [440], [622] and [444] planes, respectively. The Nelson–Riley equation was employed to determine the lattice parameter a0:25
![]() | (3) |
as the x-axis. The obtained lattice parameters for the samples with x = 0.2, 0.3, 0.4 and 0.45 were 10.379, 10.401, 10.425 and 10.45 Å, respectively.
Fig. 4a and b show the Nyquist plots and fitting curves for x = 0.3 and 0.45 recorded at room temperature. The insets show the equivalence circuits. The plots a composed of a semicircle and a low-frequency tail consistent with Li+ blocking at the stainless-steel electrodes, demonstrating ionic conduction properties. The parallel-plate capacitor model was used to estimate the capacitance C of the grain boundary and bulk:
![]() | (4) |
σ exhibited an almost linear dependence on the inverse temperature and therefore followed the Arrhenius equation σ = σ0
exp(−Ea,DC/(kBT)). The calculated activation energies Ea,DC were 0.632, 0.590 and 0.446 eV for the samples with x = 0.3, 0.4 and 0.45, respectively. These results proved that the ionic conductivity at room temperature of cubic Li2ZnCl4 was greatly improved due to the solid solution formation with Li3InCl6. The results from equivalent circuit and DRT tests (Fig. 4b and d) show that the grain boundary resistance was the main issue in the ionic conductivity at room temperature of the sample with x = 0.45; therefore, a pellet of this sample was prepared by hot-pressing at 170 °C and 30 MPa for 1 h to reduce the grain boundary resistance. The temperature dependence of the ionic conductivity of the hot-pressed pellet is plotted in Fig. 4e and denoted as ‘x = 0.45 Hot-pressed'. It could be seen that the ionic conductivity at room temperature was greatly improved because the grain boundary resistivity was reduced. The ionic conductivity at 25 °C was about 9.2 × 10−4 S cm−1 and the activation energy was about 0.300 eV. The ionic conductivity for x = 0.45 is comparable to that of the reported halide solid electrolytes as shown in Table 1.
| Solid electrolyte | Structure | Ionic conductivity/S cm−1 | Activation energy/eV | Preparation method | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li3YBr6 | C2/m | 1.7 × 10−3 (RT) | 0.37 | Ball milling and heat treatment | 5 |
| Li3InCl6 | C2/m | 1.49 × 10−3 (25 °C) | — | Ball milling and heat treatment | 27 |
| Li3InCl6 | C2/m | 2.04 × 10−3 (25 °C) | 0.347 | Aqueous solution | 6 |
| Li2ZrCl6 | C2/m | 4.0 × 10−4 (30 °C) | 0.37 | Ball milling | 9 |
| Mn-doped Li2ZrCl6 | C2/m | 8.0 × 10−4 (30 °C) | 0.326 | Ball milling | 11 |
| LiAlBr4 | P21/c | 1.7 × 10−4 (30 °C) | 0.437 | Ball milling | 19 |
| Li3YbCl6 |
P m1 |
1.06 × 10−4 (30 °C) | 0.51 | High temperature solid state reaction | 28 |
| Li3YBr5.7F0.3 | C2/m | 2.04 × 10−3 (25 °C) | 0.378 | High temperature solid state reaction | 29 |
| Li3InCl4.8F1.2 | C2/m | 5.1 × 10−4 (30 °C) | — | Ball milling and heat treatment | 30 |
| Li3TiCl6 | C2/m | 1.04 × 10−3 (25 °C) | 0.32 | Ball milling and heat treatment | 18 |
| Li3ErI6 | C2/c | 6.5 × 10−4 (RT) | 0.37 | Ball milling | 17 |
| Li2.45In0.45Zn0.55Cl4.9 |
Fd m |
9.2 × 10−4 (25 °C) | 0.300 | Ball milling and heat treatment | This work |
Fig. 5a and b show the charge–discharge curves and cyclic properties of the prepared solid-state cell. The cells were cycled in constant current mode at 0.1C. The initial charge–discharge capacities were 132.9 and 110.1 mA h g−1NMC. The charge–discharge capacities were improved and reached 147.4/144.7 mA h g−1NMC at the 10th cycle. The initial coulombic efficiency (CE) was about 83.6%. At the 2nd cycle, the CE was about 98.72%. From the 3rd cycle, the CE was higher than 99.5%. The cell was stable after 50 cycles and the charge–discharge capacities were still maintained at 136.6 and 136.5 mA h g−1NMC. The cell exhibited acceptable rate capability as shown in Fig. 5c and d. The average discharge capacities were 138, 118, 98 and 70 mA h g−1NMC when the cell was cycled at 0.1, 0.2, 0.5 and 1C, respectively. High reversible capacity remained after the rate performance indicated that the structure of the cell was not affected by this process. The long-term cycling at 0.5C was also investigated to study the cell's stability at a high rate. The result is shown in Fig. 5e. The cell maintained a good discharge capacity of about 90 mA h g−1NMC and a coulombic efficiency of about 99.8%. Thus, the results suggested that the prepared solid electrolyte was compatible with the high Ni active material LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2.
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