In pursuit of high-energy/power density, lithium-ion
batteries
suffer from increasing safety risks that need to be urgently solved.
These safety problems promisingly might be solved by replacing liquid
electrolytes (LEs) with inorganic solid electrolytes (SEs), because
of their high thermal stability and nonflammability. However, thermal
stability studies on sulfide SEs have been rarely reported, due to
their extremely high reactivity, strong corrosiveness, instability
to air, toxic gas release, etc. To fill this gap,
thermal stability performances of sulfide SEs are verified from the
perspectives of essential combustion elements in this work. Simple
and effective experimental devices/approaches have been developed
to systematically study the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of
thermal stability between typical sulfide SEs (Li3PS4, Li7P3S11, Li6PS5Cl, LSPSCl, Li4SnS4) and oxide
cathode Li1–x
CoO2 with
different delithiation states. Practical improved methods are realized
to block the thermochemical interfacial reaction for enhanced thermal
stability between sulfide SEs and oxide cathodes.
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