Enabling 420 Wh kg−1 Stable Lithium-Metal Pouch Cells by Lanthanum Doping

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Abstract

Lithium (Li) metal, a promising anode for high-energy-density rechargeable batteries, typically grows along the low-surface energy (110) plane in the plating process, resulting in uncontrollable dendrite growth and unstable interface. Herein, an unexpected Li growth behavior by lanthanum (La) doping is reported: the preferred orientation turns to (200) from (110) plane, enabling 2D nuclei rather than the usual 1D nuclei upon Li deposition and thus forming a dense and dendrite-free morphology even at an ultrahigh areal capacity of 10 mAh cm−2. Noticeably, La doping further decreases the reactivity of Li metal toward electrolytes, thereby establishing a stable interface. The dendrite-free, stable Li anode enables a high average Coulombic efficiency of 99.30% at 8 mAh cm−2 for asymmetric Li||LaF3–Cu cells. A 3.1 Ah LaF3–Li||LiNi0.8Co0.1Mn0.1O2 pouch cell at a high energy density (425.73 Wh kg−1) with impressive cycling stability (0.0989% decay per cycle) under lean electrolyte (1.76 g Ah−1) and high cathode loading (5.77 mAh cm−2) using this doped Li anode is further demonstrated.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2211032
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume35
Issue number15
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Apr 2023

Keywords

  • high energy density
  • lanthanum doping
  • lithium-metal batteries
  • pouch cells
  • preferred orientation

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