Non-equilibrium kinetics for improving ionic conductivity in garnet solid electrolyte†
Abstract
Solid-state electrolytes (SSEs), as an essential component of all solid-state batteries, exhibit limited ionic conductivity. The fractional occupancy of Li+ ions, regulated by the doping of hetero-valent transition metals, is an important characteristic to enable high Li+ conductivity. However, the structural and kinetic mechanism of this is still unclear, preventing the rational design of higher-conductivity SSEs. Here, taking the typical garnet SSE Li7−xLa3Zr2−xTaxO12 (0≤ x ≤0.625) as an example, we revealed that a Ta5+-doping concentration of x = 0.25 leads to a high amount of non-equilibrium Li+ configurations in the form of [LiO6]-[LiO4]-[VLiO6]. Non-equilibrium configurations induce high off-center shifts and high electrostatic energies of Li+ ions, reducing the activation energy of Li+-ionic transport. As a result, the doping of hetero-valent ions has a great effect on Li+-ionic conductivity through controlling the amount of non-equilibrium Li+ ions. These findings provide important insight into the understanding of ionic transport and pave the way towards optimizing Li+ distribution to improve ionic conductivity.