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Deflecting Dendrites by Introducing Compressive Stress in Li7La3Zr2O12 Using Ion Implantation

Abstract

Lithium dendrites belong to the key challenges of solid-state battery research. They are unavoidable due to the imperfect nature of surfaces containing defects of a critical size that can be filled by lithium until fracturing the solid electrolyte. The penetration of Li metal occurs along the propagating crack until a short circuit takes place. It is hypothesized that ion implantation can be used to introduce stress states into Li6.4La3Zr1.4Ta0.6O12 which enables an effective deflection and arrest of dendrites. The compositional and microstructural changes associated with the implantation of Ag-ions are studied via atom probe tomography, electron microscopy, and nano X-ray diffraction indicating that Ag-ions can be implanted up to 1 µm deep and amorphization takes place down to 650–700 nm, in good agreement with kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. Based on diffraction results pronounced stress states up to −700 MPa are generated in the near-surface region. Such a stress zone and the associated microstructural alterations exhibit the ability to not only deflect mechanically introduced cracks but also dendrites, as demonstrated by nano-indentation and galvanostatic cycling experiments with subsequent electron microscopy observations. These results demonstrate ion implantation as a viable technique to design “dendrite-free” solid-state electrolytes for high-power and energy-dense solid-state batteries.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Florian Flatscher
  • Juraj Todt
  • Manfred Burghammer
  • Hanne-Sofie Marie Scisly Søreide
  • Lukas Porz
  • Yanjun Li
  • Sigurd Wenner
  • Viktor Bobal
  • Steffen Ganschow
  • Bernhard Sartory
  • Roland Brunner
  • Constantinos Hatzoglou
  • Jozef Keckes
  • Daniel Rettenwander

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Materials and Nanotechnology
  • European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
  • Leibniz Institute for Crystal Growth
  • Austria
  • Austrian Academy of Sciences
  • University of Oslo
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2023

Published in

Small

ISSN

1613-6810

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository