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Quantifying the search for solid Li-ion electrolyte materials by anion: A data-driven perspective

Abstract:
We compile data and machine-learned models of solid Li-ion electrolyte performance to assess the state of materials discovery efforts and build new insights for future efforts. Candidate electrolyte materials must satisfy several requirements—chief among them fast ionic conductivity and robust electrochemical stability. Considering these two requirements, we find new evidence to suggest that Cl-, Br-, and I-based solid ion conductors are generally more likely to satisfy fast ionic conductivity and electrochemical stability requirements than materials from other common families, e.g., the sulfides and oxides. Furthermore, we find that sulfide- and oxide-based materials are generally poor electrolyte candidates, but optimization of the sulfides for fast ionic conductivity and wide electrochemical stability may be more likely than optimization of the oxides. We also find that the nitrides and phosphides appear to be the most promising material families for electrolytes stable against Li-metal anodes. Furthermore, the spread of the existing data in performance space suggests that fast conducting materials that are stable against both Li metal and a >4 V cathode are exceedingly rare and that a multiple-electrolyte architecture is a more likely path to successfully realizing a solid-state Li metal battery by approximately an order of magnitude or more. Our model is validated by its reproduction of well-known trends that have emerged from the limited existing data in recent years, namely that the electronegativity of the lattice anion correlates with ionic conductivity and electrochemical stability. In this work, we leverage the existing data to provide the first data-driven quantification of trends and correlations among ionic conductivity, stability, and anion electronegativity, building a roadmap to complement material discovery efforts around the desired material performance.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1021/acs.jpcc.9b10650

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Division:
MPLS
Department:
Materials
Sub department:
Materials
Role:
Author


Publisher:
American Chemical Society
Journal:
Journal of Physical Chemistry C More from this journal
Volume:
124
Issue:
15
Pages:
8067-8079
Publication date:
2020-04-02
Acceptance date:
2020-03-18
DOI:
EISSN:
1932-7455
ISSN:
1932-7447


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1101511
Local pid:
pubs:1101511
Deposit date:
2020-05-11

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