Favorable Interfacial Chemomechanics Enables Stable Cycling of High Li-Content Li-In/Sn Anodes in Sulfide Electrolyte Based Solid-State Batteries
Christian H\"ansel, Baltej Singh, David Kiwic, Pieremanuele Canepa,, Dipan Kundu

TL;DR
This study reveals how favorable interfacial chemomechanics in high Li-content Li-In/Sn alloys enable stable, long-term cycling in sulfide electrolyte-based solid-state batteries, advancing high-capacity anode development.
Contribution
It uncovers the electro-chemo-mechanical behavior of high Li-content Li-In/Sn alloys and demonstrates their stable cycling performance in sulfide electrolyte SSBs.
Findings
Stable long-term cycling (>1000 h) at high current densities.
High-capacity Li-In/Sn alloys maintain interfacial contact.
Li migration barrier varies with composition affecting overpotential.
Abstract
Solid-state batteries (SSBs) can offer a paradigm shift in battery safety and energy density. Yet, the promise hinges on the ability to integrate high-performance electrodes with state-of-the-art solid electrolytes. For example, lithium (Li) metal, the most energy-dense anode candidate, suffers from severe interfacial chemomechanical issues that lead to cell failure. Li alloys of In/Sn are attractive alternatives, but their exploration has mostly been limited to the low capacity(low Li content)and In rich LiIn (x0.5). Here, the fundamental electro-chemo-mechanical behavior of Li-In and Li-Sn alloys of varied Li stoichiometries is unravelled in sulfide electrolyte based SSBs. The intermetallic electrodes developed through a controlled synthesis and fabrication technique display impressive (electro)chemical stability with LiPSCl as the solid electrolyte and maintain…
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