Beyond Coatings: Epitaxial Interface Engineering for High-Energy Liquid-Electrolyte and Solid-State Batteries

Abstract

Interfacial instability limits the performance of high-energy batteries. In both liquid-electrolyte and solid-state battery systems, degradation at the cathode surface is critical, where electrolyte reactivity, lattice oxygen instability, transition-metal dissolution, and mechanical damage can develop together. Conventional coating strategies can mitigate parasitic reactions, but many coatings remain structurally discontinuous, weakly bonded to the cathode, or transport-limiting. This Perspective presents epitaxial interface engineering (EIE) as a route to more integrated cathode surface design. In battery materials, EIE does not require ideal thin-film epitaxy. It refers to thin, surface-localized structures that are crystallographically correlated with the cathode and chemically coupled to it through a bonded interface. Such architectures can stabilize reactive cathode surfaces while preserving ion and electron transport. We examine the definition and verification of EIE, the formation of growth-mode-derived architectures, and representative examples in liquid-electrolyte and solid-state batteries. Remaining challenges and future directions for EIE are discussed in the final section.

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
24 Apr 2026
Accepted
08 Jun 2026
First published
08 Jun 2026

Mater. Horiz., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Beyond Coatings: Epitaxial Interface Engineering for High-Energy Liquid-Electrolyte and Solid-State Batteries

X. Zhu, X. Li and L. Wang, Mater. Horiz., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6MH00816J

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