Building Stable Anodes for High‐Rate Na‐Metal Batteries

Author:

Wang Xihao1,Lu Jingyu1ORCID,Wu Yehui1,Zheng Weiran23ORCID,Zhang Hongqiang4,Bai Tiansheng4,Liu Hongbin5ORCID,Li Deping4ORCID,Ci Lijie4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Science Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen) Shenzhen 518055 China

2. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Materials and Technologies for Energy Conversion Guangdong Technion‐Israel Institute of Technology Shantou 515063 China

3. Department of Chemistry Guangdong Technion‐Israel Institute of Technology Shantou 515063 China

4. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Welding and Joining School of Materials Science and Engineering Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen) Shenzhen 518055 China

5. School of Electrical Engineering Zhejiang University of Water Resources and Electric Power Hangzhou 310018 China

Abstract

AbstractDue to low cost and high energy density, sodium metal batteries (SMBs) have attracted growing interest, with great potential to power future electric vehicles (EVs) and mobile electronics, which require rapid charge/discharge capability. However, the development of high‐rate SMBs has been impeded by the sluggish Na+ ion kinetics, particularly at the sodium metal anode (SMA). The high‐rate operation severely threatens the SMA stability, due to the unstable solid‐electrolyte interface (SEI), the Na dendrite growth, and large volume changes during Na plating‐stripping cycles, leading to rapid electrochemical performance degradations. This review surveys key challenges faced by high‐rate SMAs, and highlights representative stabilization strategies, including the general modification of SMB components (including the host, Na metal surface, electrolyte, separator, and cathode), and emerging solutions with the development of solid‐state SMBs and liquid metal anodes; the working principle, performance, and application of these strategies are elaborated, to reduce the Na nucleation energy barriers and promote Na+ ion transfer kinetics for stable high‐rate Na metal anodes. This review will inspire further efforts to stabilize SMAs and other metal (e.g., Li, K, Mg, Zn) anodes, promoting high‐rate applications of high‐energy metal batteries towards a more sustainable society.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Program

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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