Glass-ceramics and molybdenum doping synergistic approach for Nasicon-type solid-state electrolytes

Abstract

Advancing energy density, enabling lithium metal anodes, and ensuring unparalleled safety and operational reliability in lithium batteries hinge on advancing inorganic solid-state electrolytes. To overcome current im-pediments, we present an innovative approach that integrates glass-ceramics with a pioneering new Nasicon strategy involving molybdenum doping. In the conducted study, a series of 14Li2O-9Al2O3-38TiO2-(39-x)P2O5- xMoO3 glasses, denoted as LATPMox, along with their corresponding glass-ceramics (LATPMox-GC), have exhibited a promising characteristic as solid electrolytes. X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis confirms the formation of the novel Mo-doped Nasicon phases in the glass-ceramics, as validated by Rietveld refinement. Examination of the crystallization kinetic behavior of the glasses reveals a three-dimensional nucleation process with spherical particle growth, featuring an activation energy of 165 kJ mol-1. Transmission Electron Microscopy TEM char-acterization aligns crystallization behavior with crystallite and distribution within the glass matrix, resulting in a compact and dense microstructure. The structural properties of the resultant phases are examined through FT-IR, Raman spectroscopy, and TEM-SEAD analysis. Vickers indentation tests were employed to assess the microscopic fracture toughness, and both the glass and glass-ceramics materials demonstrated favorable mechanical per-formance. Optical characterization using UV–visible absorption highlights the reduction of Mo6+ to Mo5+, likely occupying tetrahedral sites within the crystalline lattice. Impedance spectroscopy measurement showcases the effective promotion of ionic conductivity following Mo doping, reaching a total conductivity value of 5.50 × 10-5 Ω-1 cm-1 along with a high lithium transference number of 0.99 at room temperature for LATPMo2.6-GC glass-ceramic. This value is larger than that of many other glass-ceramics as well as that of the well-known lithium phosphorous oxy-nitride LiPON solid electrolyte whose ionic conductivity at RT is around 2 × 10-6 Ω-1 cm-1

Similar works

Full text

thumbnail-image

Juelich Shared Electronic Resources

redirect
Last time updated on 24/02/2025

This paper was published in Juelich Shared Electronic Resources.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.