Lithium Metal Penetration Induced by Electrodeposition through Solid Electrolytes: Example in Single-Crystal Li6La3ZrTaO12 Garnet
Tushar Swamy, Richard Park, Brian W. Sheldon, Daniel Rettenwander,, Lukas Porz, Stefan Berendts, Reinhard Uecker, W. Craig Carter, Yet-Ming, Chiang

TL;DR
This study investigates lithium metal penetration through single-crystal garnet solid electrolytes during electrodeposition, revealing that surface flaws and current collector edges significantly influence failure, with electric field concentration playing a key role.
Contribution
It demonstrates how surface defects and current collector discontinuities affect lithium penetration, highlighting the importance of electric field effects in solid electrolyte stability.
Findings
Lithium penetration initiates at surface flaws and current collector edges.
Large surface defects and current discontinuities promote lithium propagation.
Electric field enhancement near defects influences failure sites.
Abstract
Solid electrolytes are considered a potentially enabling component in rechargeable batteries that use lithium metal as the negative electrode, and thereby can safely access higher energy density than available with today's lithium ion batteries. To do so, the solid electrolyte must be able to suppress morphological instabilities that lead to poor coulombic efficiency and, in the worst case, internal short circuits. In this work, lithium electrodeposition experiments were performed using single-crystal Li6La3ZrTaO12 garnet as solid electrolyte layers to investigate the factors that determine whether lithium penetration occurs through brittle inorganic solid electrolytes. In these single crystals, grain boundaries are excluded as possible paths for lithium metal propagation. However, Vickers microindentation was used to introduce sharp surface flaws of known size. Using operando optical…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
