Lithium-ion batteries can be composed and formed to provide effective energy for powering electric motor driven vehicles and for powering many other consumer products. Some lithium-ion batteries use a liquid electrolyte and others use a solid electrolyte. For commercial applications, it is desirable to enhance safety and increase power/energy densities of such lithium-ion battery cells by using solid electrolytes. In existing solid-state lithium-ion electrochemical battery cells, particles of a common solid electrolyte composition are used as the solid electrolyte layer (also known as separator layer) and in mixtures with electrode active particles in both the anode and cathode layers of the cell. However, it has been found that such a practice can present serious performance issues in the lithium-ion cell. A macro-interface in a cell, between an electrolyte layer of solid electrolyte particles and an adjoining coextensive electrode layer of mixed electrode material particles and solid electrolyte particles, is usually poor and can result in a large interfacial resistance. Also, lithium dendrite growth can occur when graphite or lithium metal is used as the anode material. In addition, the commonly-used solid electrolyte composition has a limited electrochemical window, and cannot enable a good electrochemical compatibility with both anode and cathode active material simultaneously. For example, sulfide-based solid electrolyte could have a good electrochemical compatibility with anode active material such as graphite, however, it cannot match well with the high-voltage cathode active material such as 5V LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4. This practice can also cause micro-interface issues between mixed nanometer/micrometer-size particles of electrode (anode or cathode) active material particles and particles of solid electrolyte, and adversely affect the cell performance of the lithium-ion cell.
In this disclosure, the performance of lithium-ion battery cells, especially using relatively high-voltage cathode active material, is increased by building up stabilized and favorable micro-interfaces between the particles of anode active material and particles of a selected solid electrolyte in an anode layer of the battery cell, where the anode active material has a good chemical/electrochemical compatibility with this selected solid electrolyte. Likewise, stabilized and favorable micro-interfaces are obtained between the cathode active particles and suitably selected solid electrolyte particles in the cell's cathode layer. Further, it is found that the macro-interface between the anode layer, and/or the cathode layer, and the coextensive, interposed, solid electrolyte layer is improved by introducing a suitable thin interlayer film between the electrode layer and the selected solid electrolyte layer. The function of the interlayer film material is to enable an intimate interfacial connection and minimize the interfacial resistance at the macro-interface between the anode layer and/or the cathode layer and the coextensive solid electrolyte layer of the cell.
In an illustrative initial example, a solid-state lithium-ion battery cell is formed using a selectively shaped (e.g., rectangular) and uniformly thick anode layer that includes particles of anode active material (e.g., such as graphite particles), a like-shaped and uniformly thick cathode layer that includes cathode active material particles (such as high-voltage, 5V, LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4 particles, sometimes LMNO in this specification). The anode layer and cathode layer are placed against opposite coextensive faces of a compatibly-shaped, uniformly thick layer of solid-electrolyte particles (such as Li10GeP2Si2). The electrode and electrolyte particles are sometimes of a roughly spherical shape with largest dimensions in the range of about 2 nanometers to about 1000 micrometers. The thicknesses of the respective cell member layers (typically in the range of about 5-1000 micrometers for one layer) are based on their composition and their required electrochemical capacity in the cell unit. Such a basic cell unit may be electrically interconnected with like cell units to achieve a desired multi-cell battery voltage, power and energy. The performance of the electrochemical cell requires good conduction of lithium cations.
In prior practices, particles of the same single solid electrolyte material, e.g., Li10GeP2Si2, are mixed with the anode active material particles and the cathode active material particles, and are also used as the solid electrolyte layer material for the solid-state battery. But it has proven to be difficult to find an appropriate single solid electrolyte composition that serves well, providing stable particle-to-particle micro-interfaces when mixed with both particles of a selected anode active material and also with particles of a selected cathode active material composition, due to the limited electrochemical window of the solid electrolyte. Moreover, when the same solid electrolyte is placed, as a coextensive layer of solid electrolyte material, between the layers of anode material and cathode material, the formed layer-to-layer macro interfaces are often poor. In accordance with this disclosure, that practice is not followed.
In accordance with practices of embodiments of this disclosure, specific, often different, solid electrolyte compositions are selected for mixture with each of the anode active material and the cathode active material. In the case of selections of a solid electrolyte for the anode layer mixture, these choices are made, for example, to enhance particle-to-particle micro-interfaces stability within the mixed electrode layers, to improve chemical compatibility within the anode active material, to reduce small grain boundary resistance, and to inhibit lithium dendrite formation (e.g., in a graphite or lithium anode). The solid electrolyte particle composition selected for the cathode mixture is chosen to enhance thermodynamic stability in high cell potential ranges (e.g., close to 5V), and/or to minimize elemental diffusion and space-charge layer effect. A further different solid electrolyte particle composition, with high lithium ionic conductivity and low electronic conductivity, may be used for the solid electrolyte layer composition.
In accordance with a further embodiment of this disclosure a relatively thin interface film layer composition(s) is preferably often selected for placement between the anode layer, and/or the cathode layer, and the interposed solid electrolyte layer. For example, the purpose of the interlayer material film is to improve the interface connection and to minimize interfacial resistance between the anode or cathode material layer and the adjoining solid electrolyte layer, to form a gradient change of lithium ions, to avoid side-reactions between the respective layers, and to suppress lithium dendrite nucleation (e.g., when using graphite or lithium anode active material).
In the development of a specific lithium-ion battery cell combination for a specific application of the cell, or group of cells, a specific electrode active material composition is chosen for each of the anode active material (particles) and the cathode active material (particles). In accordance with some practices of this disclosure, a first specific composition is chosen for the particles of the solid electrolyte to be mixed with the anode active material particles (SE1 composition in this specification), a different specific composition is chosen for the particles of the solid electrolyte to be mixed with the cathode active material particles (SE3), and a third specific composition is chosen for the particles of solid electrolyte material (SE2) to be used in the electrolyte layer placed between the particulate anode material layer and the particulate cathode material layer of each electrochemical cell of the lithium-ion battery. In one embodiment of this disclosure, each of the three specific electrolyte compositions is different from the other two electrolyte compositions. That is, SE1≠SE2≠SE3. Each of the three particulate solid electrolyte compositions is specifically selected for its location and function in the cell.
In another embodiment of this disclosure, a common electrolyte composition may be used only in two members of the anode layer, the cathode layer, and solid electrolyte layer.
Furthermore, in lithium-ion battery cells it is preferred to place a thin interlayer film of particles between the anode layer of mixed particles and the solid electrolyte layer and/or between the solid electrolyte layer and the cathode layer of mixed particles.
As a general, illustrative example, the weight proportions of the constituents in an individual electrode mixture will comprise about forty percent by weight or more of the anode or cathode active material particles, up to about sixty percent by weight of the particles of the selected solid electrolyte composition, and, optionally, a minor portion of conductive particles (such as conductive carbon particles) and/or a minor portion of a compatible binder material (often a polymeric binder material). The maximum major dimension of the generally spherical or irregularly shaped particles will typically be in the nanometer-size range (2 nm or larger) or the micrometer-size range, less than 1000 micrometers.
Preferably, solid electrolyte particles selected for mixing with anode active material particles are chemically compatible with the anode material, present low grain boundary resistance, mix in intimate contact with the anode particles, and inhibit lithium dendrite formation (e.g., when used in a graphite or lithium metal anode). Solid electrolyte particles for the solid electrolyte layer must provide high lithium ion conductivity and low electronic conductivity. Solid electrode particles selected for mixing with cathode active material particles must be thermodynamically stable in high voltage potential ranges (e.g., about 5V), and present minimal space-charge layer effect and diffusion of elements with the cathode particles.
As stated above, in one embodiment, a cell may be formed using a different solid electrolyte material composition for each layer member of the cell, and a thin interlayer is placed between the anode layer (and/or the cathode layer) and the solid electrolyte layer. In an illustrative example, lithium-ion battery anode material is formed of a mixture containing of graphite particles, Li9.6P3S12 solid electrolyte particles and other components such as polymer binder and conductive particles. A thin interlayer film (e.g., a few micrometers in thickness) of polyethylene oxide-bonded (PEO), lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl) imide (LiTFSI) is placed co-extensively against the anode layer. In the cell, the solid electrolyte layer (co-extensively lying against the interlayer) is formed of particles of Li10GeP2S12 (LGPS). And the cathode layer, lying co-extensively against the other side of the solid electrolyte layer, is formed of a particulate mixture of Li7La3Zr2O12/polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF)/LiTFSI hybrid solid electrolyte, LiNbO3-coated LNi0.5Mn1.5O4 cathode active material, and other components such as polymer binder and conductive particles. This LIB cell is capable of producing four volts over repeated discharge and recharge cycles.
Obviously, groups of such cells may be electrically connected in series (such as bipolar stacking) or parallel arrangement to produce a required voltage and capacity/energy in a battery of such cells.
In other embodiments of the disclosure, depending on specific electrode material/solid electrolyte particle compatibilities at the micro-interface level, two of the electrode members and the solid electrolyte layer of the cell may be formed with particles of the same solid electrolyte composition. Sometimes, a selected common electrolyte composition works satisfactorily in two locations within the three cell members.
In another embodiment of the disclosure, a film-like interlayer of particles is placed between both electrode layers and the interposed solid electrolyte layer. The purpose of the interlayer(s) is to serve to facilitate ion flow between an electrolyte layer and a facing electrode material layer. And an interlayer may resist lithium dendrite growth from the anode material layer. As illustrated above, each such interlayer may comprise mixtures of a polymer-based composition and a lithium-containing composition.
In another embodiment, the solid electrolyte layer may be formed of two overlying, co-extensive layers in which one solid electrolyte layer uses particles of the same solid electrolyte composition as is used in the anode and the other solid electrolyte layer uses particles of the same composition as the facing cathode layer. Optionally, a resin-bonded, particulate interlayer film may be placed between the two different solid electrolyte layers. And interlayers may be placed between the electrode layers and the bilayer solid electrolyte and its interlayer.
In still another embodiment, the solid-state cell may be infiltrated with a suitable amount of a suitable non-aqueous liquid electrolyte to supplement (but not replace) the function of the solid electrolyte particles used in the electrode layers and the solid electrolyte layer(s).
Further detailed disclosures of anode active material-solid electrolyte combinations, solid electrolyte layer combinations, cathode layer combinations, and interlayer materials are presented in following paragraphs of this specification.
In
As stated, it is desired to form lithium battery cells in which cathode active material compositions and anode active electrode material compositions are paired with compatible and supportive particulate solid electrolyte material compositions in the respective electrode layers. Further, it is intended to utilize compatible solid electrolyte compositions, and, when necessary, suitable interlayer film compositions between layers of electrode materials and a solid electrolyte layer. Following are lists of exemplary, but non-limiting, compositions of such cathode, anode, electrolyte and interlayer materials:
Examples of suitable cathode active materials include high-voltage oxides. e.g., LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4, rock salt layered oxides (LiCoO2, LiNixMnyCo1−x−yO2, LiNixMn1−xO2, Li1+xMO2), spinel (LiMn2O4), polyanion cathode (LiV2(PO4)3), and other lithium transition-metal oxides and coated and/or doped cathode materials mentioned above. e.g., LiNbO3-coated LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4,
Examples of suitable solid electrolyte materials for use with particles of cathode active materials include:
Oxide solid electrolyte (SE) such as Perovskite type (Li3xLa2/3−xTiO3), NASICON type (Li1.4Al0.4Ti1.6(PO4)3 and Li1+xAlxGe2−x(PO4)3, LISICON type (Li2+2xZn1−xGeO4), garnet type (Li7La3Zr2O12).
Inorganic oxide SE/polymer hybrid electrolytes, e.g., Li6.4La3Zr1.4Ta0.6O12/Li-salt-free polyethylene oxides (PEOs), Li6.75La3Zr1.75Ta0.25O12/poly (propylene carbonate), Li7La3Zr2O12/polyethylene oxide, Li7La3Zr2O12/poly (vinylidene fluoride-hexafluoropropylene) (PVDF-HFP).
Inorganic oxide SE/polymer/lithium salt hybrid electrolyte. e.g., garnet/polyethylene-oxide/lithium salt (Li7La3Zr2O12/polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF)/LiTFSI hybrid electrolyte)
Metal-doped or aliovalent-substituted oxide SE. e.g., Al (or Nb)-doped Li7La3Zr2O12, Sb-doped Li7La3Zr2O12 Ga-substituted Li7La3Zr2O12, Cr and V-substituted LiSn2P3O12, Al-substituted perovskite.
high-voltage-stable sulfide solid electrolyte, such as core-shell Li9.54Si1.74P1.44S11.7Cl0.3.
Lithium Phosphorus Oxynitride
Examples of suitable anode active material particles include:
Carbonaceous material (e.g. graphite, hard carbon, soft carbon etc.), silicon, silicon mixed with graphite, Li4Ti5O12, transition-metal (e.g., Sn), metal oxide/sulfide (e.g., SnO2, FeS and the likes), and other lithium-accepting anode materials.
Li Metal Foil and Li-Metal Alloy (Li—In).
Examples of solid electrolyte particles for use with particles of anode active electrolyte particles include:
Sulfide-based SE. e.g., Li2S—P2S5, Li2S-P2S5-MSx, Li2S—P2S5 with LiI, LGPS (Li10GeP2S12), thio-LISICON (Li3.25Ge0.25P0.75S4), Li3.4Si0.4P0.6S4, Li10GeP2S11.7O0.3, Li9.54Si1.74P1.44S11.7Cl0.3, Li9.6P3S12, Li7P3S11, Li9P3S9O3, Li10.35Ge1.35P1.65S12, Li10.35Si1.35P1.65S12, Li9.81Sn0.81P2.19S12, Li10(Si0.5Ge0.5)P2S12, Li10(Ge0.5Sn0.5)P2S12, and Li10(Si0.5Sn0.5)P2S12.
Surface-modified sulfide SEs. e.g., ZnO-deposited Li2S—P2S5.
Lithium argyrodite-type SE. e.g., Li6PS5X (X═Cl, Br, or I).
Inorganic sulfide SE/polymer hybrid electrolyte. e.g., 77.5 Li2S-22.5 P2S5/polyimine, LGPS/polyethylene oxide.
Inorganic sulfide SE/polymer/lithium salt hybrid electrolyte. e.g., LGPS/polyethylene oxide/LiTFSI.
Other SEs. e.g., LiPON.
Examples of suitable solid electrolyte compositions for the layer of solid electrolyte particles include: Sulfide-based SE. e.g., Li2S—P2S5, Li2S-P2S5-MSx, LGPS (Li10GeP2S12), thio-LISICON (Li3.25Ge0.25P0.75S4), Li3.4Si0.4P0.6S4, Li10GeP2S11.7O0.3, lithium argyrodite Li6PS5X (X═Cl, Br, or I), Li9.54Si1.74P1.44S11.7Cl0.3 (25 mS/cm), Li9.6P3S12, Li7P3S11, Li9P3S9O3, Li10.35Ge1.35P1.65S12, Li10.35Si1.35P1.65S12, Li9.81Sn0.81P2.19S12, Li10(Si0.5Ge0.5)P2S12, Li10(Ge0.5Sn0.5)P2S12, and Li10(Si0.5Sn0.5)P2S12.
Oxide-based SE. e.g., perovskite type (Li3xLa2/3—xTiO3), NASICON type (LiTi2(PO4)3), Li1+xAlxTi2−x(PO4)3 (LATP), Li1+xAlxGe2−x(PO4)3 (LAGP), Li1+xYxZr2−x(PO4)3 (LYZP), LISICON type (Li14Zn(GeO4)4), Garnet type (Li6.5La3Zr1.75Te0.25O12).
Polymer-based SE: a polymer host is combined with a lithium salt solid electrolyte to act as a solid solvent. Polymer host: PEO, PPO, PEG, PMMA, PAN, PVDF, PVDF-HFP, PVC. Salts: lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl) imide (LiTFSI).
Nitride-based SE. e.g. Li3N, Li7PN4, LiSi2N3.
Hydride-based SE. e.g. LiBH4, LiBH4—LiX (X═Cl, Br or I), LiNH2, Li2NH, LiBH4—LiNH2, Li3AlH6
Halide-based SE. e.g. LiI, Li2CdCl4, Li2MgCl4, Li2CdI4, Li2ZnI4, Li3OCl
Borate-based SE. e.g. Li2B4O7, Li2O—B2O3—P2O5
Inorganic SE/polymer-based hybrid electrolyte.
Surface-modified solid electrolyte materials. In-deposited Li7La3Zr2O12
Examples of suitable compositions for interlayer particle compositions include:
Inorganic interlayer (e.g., 70% Li2S-29% P2S5-1% P2O5).
Polymer-based interlayer (e.g., poly (ethylene glycol) methyl ether acrylate with Al2O3 and LiTFSI; polyethylene oxide with LiTFSI; poly (vinylidene fluoride) copolymer with hexafluoropropylene (PVDF-HFP)-based gel electrolyte.).
Metal/metal oxide (e.g., Nb, Al, Si or Al2O3).
In the following illustrative figures, various embodiments of this disclosure are illustrated, particularly concerning the combinations of particulate electrode active materials and particulate solid electrolyte materials, adjoining solid electrolyte layers and interlayers used with solid electrolyte layers. In the respective illustrative figures, the thicknesses of the respective layers and the sizes of the particles of electrode materials are enlarged for purposes of the illustration. Illustrative, representative sizes of the electrode materials and the electrode elements themselves are presented above in this text and in following portions of this text. Further, only single battery unit cells are drawn and with the cell member layers presented in a horizontal posture to better fit the illustrations on a drawing sheet. In use, many battery cells may be assembled in upstanding stacks or rolls and many cells may be combined in an assembly in which they are connected in electrical series combination, electrical parallel combination, or in both electrical series and parallel combinations.
In
Anode material layer 104 is an intimate mixture of nanometer-size to micrometer-size particles of anode active material, for example graphite particles 106, intimately mixed with like-size particles of a selected solid electrolyte 108 and other components such as polymer binder and conductive particles. (Not shown in figure) In this example, the composition of the solid electrolyte particles 108, intimately mixed with the graphite anode material particles 106, is Li9.6P3Si12. For purposes of comparison with other examples of the selection of suitable solid electrolyte particles for an electrode member, the composition of the solid electrolyte material for an anode of a lithium-ion cell is also designated in this text as SE1.
In the embodiment of
Placed in intimate, coextensive contact with the opposite side of solid electrolyte layer 112, is a layer 116 of cathode material. Cathode material layer 116 is suitably formed of a mixture of nanometer-size to micrometer-size particles of cathode active material 118, particles of suitable solid electrolyte material 120 and other components such as polymer binder and conductive particles. (Not shown in figure). An example of the composition of a suitable cathode active material is LiNbO3-coated LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4, and a suitable compatible solid electrolyte material is Li7La3Zr2O12/polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF)/lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI) hybrid electrolyte (SE3). Attached in face-to-face-coextensive contact with the opposite side of cathode layer 116 is cathode current collector 122 with its optional tab 122′ for connection with an energy requiring device. During cell discharge, cathode current collector displays a positive electrical charge.
Thus, in the embodiment of
In the embodiments of
In
In the embodiment illustrated in
In the lithium-ion battery cell 200B illustrated
And in the lithium-ion battery cell 200C illustrated in
In the embodiments of the solid-state lithium-ion battery cell illustrated in the fragmented schematic cross-sectional view of
In the broken-off view at the left side of
In the broken-off view of solid-state lithium-ion battery cell 300B at the center of
In the embodiments of the disclosure presented and illustrated in
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
While the use of a liquid electrolyte in combination is illustrated with the illustrated lithium-ion solid state cell of
The above description of preferred exemplary embodiments and specific examples are descriptive in nature; they are not intended to limit the scope of the claims that follow. Each of the terms used in the appended claims should be given its ordinary and customary meaning unless specifically and unambiguously stated otherwise in the specification.