All-solid-state Li-ion batteries with commercially available electrolytes: A feasibility review

Rainer Götz, Raphael Streng, Johannes Sterzinger, Tim Steeger, Matti M. Kaye, Maksym Vitort, Aliaksandr S. Bandarenka

InfoMat ›› 2024, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (12) : e12627

PDF
InfoMat ›› 2024, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (12) : e12627 DOI: 10.1002/inf2.12627
REVIEW ARTICLE

All-solid-state Li-ion batteries with commercially available electrolytes: A feasibility review

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

The all-solid-state battery (ASSB) concept promises increases in energy density and safety; consequently recent research has focused on optimizing each component of an ideal fully solid battery. However, by doing so, one can also lose oversight of how significantly the individual components impact key parameters. Although this review presents a variety of materials, the included studies limit electrolyte-separator choices to those that are either fully commercial or whose ingredients are readily available; their thicknesses are predefined by the manufacturer or the studies in which they are included. However, we nevertheless discuss both electrode materials. Apart from typical materials, the list of anode materials includes energy-dense candidates, such as lithium metal, or anode-free approaches that are already used in Li-ion batteries. The cathode composition of an ASSB contains a fraction of the solid electrolyte, in addition to the active material and binders/plasticizers, to improve ionic conductivity. Apart from the general screening of reported composites, promising composite cathodes together with constant-thickness separators and metallic lithium anodes are the basis for studying theoretically achievable gravimetric energy densities. The results suggest that procurable oxide electrolytes in the forms of thick pellets (>300 µm) are unable to surpass the performance of already commercially available Li-ion batteries. All-solid-state cells are already capable of exceeding the performance of current batteries with energy densities of 250 Wh kg–1 by pairing composite cathodes with high mass loadings and using separators that are less than 150 µm thick, with even thinner electrolytes (20 µm) delivering more than 350 Wh kg–1.

Keywords

all-solid-state batteries / anode-free / composite cathodes / energy density / lithium metal

Author summay

Rainer Götz, Raphael Streng, and Johannes Sterzinger contributed equally to this study.

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Rainer Götz, Raphael Streng, Johannes Sterzinger, Tim Steeger, Matti M. Kaye, Maksym Vitort, Aliaksandr S. Bandarenka. All-solid-state Li-ion batteries with commercially available electrolytes: A feasibility review. InfoMat, 2024, 6(12): e12627 DOI:10.1002/inf2.12627

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

470

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/