Disorder-mediated ionic conductivity in irreducible solid electrolytes

07 October 2024, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Solid state batteries currently receive extensive attention due to their potential to outperform lithium ion batteries in terms of energy density when featuring next generation anodes such as lithium metal or silicon. However, most highly conducting solid electrolytes decompose at the low operating voltages of next-generation anodes leading to irreversible lithium loss and increased cell resistance. Such performance losses may be prevented by designing electrolytes which are thermodynamically stable at low operating voltages (anolytes). Here, we report on the discovery a new family of irreducible (i.e. fully reduced) electrolytes by mechanochemically dissolving lithium nitride into the Li2S antifluorite structure, yielding highly conducting crystalline Li2+xS1-xNx phases reaching > 0.2 mS cm-1 at ambient temperatures. Combining impedance spectroscopy experiments and ab initio density functional theory calculations we clarify the mechanism by which the disordering of the sulfide and nitride ions in the anion sublattice boosts ionic conductivity in Li2+xS1-xNx phases by a factor 10^5 compared to the Li2S host structure. This advance is achieved through a novel theoretical framework, leveraging percolation analysis with local-environment-specific activation energies and is widely applicable to disordered ion conductors. The same methodology allows us to rationalize how increasing nitrogen content in Li2+xS1-xNx antifluorite-like samples leads to both increased ionic conductivity and lower conductivity-activation energy. These findings pave the way to understanding disordered solid electrolytes and eliminating decomposition-induced performance losses on the anode side in solid-state batteries.

Keywords

solid electrolyte
disorder
solid-state battery
lithium metal
ionic conductivity
percolation

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary Information
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Supplementary data, tables and figures
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Title
disordered-Li9S3N
Description
crystallographic model of mechanochemically prepared Li9S3N refined based on neutron and x-ray powder diffraction data
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disordered-Li9S3N
Description
alternative crystallographic model of mechanochemically prepared Li9S3N refined based on neutron diffraction data, featuring split octahedral site
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ordered-Li9S3N
Description
crystallographic model of Li9S3N, synthesized by high-temperature annealing, refined based on x-ray powder diffraction data
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Supplementary weblinks

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