“…However, high conductivity above 10 −4 S cm −1 at a room temperature range is only obtained in the former, densified by high temperature sintering. Partial substitution of the Zr 4+ site in LLZ by other higher valence cations, such as Nb 5+ [13,14], Ta 5+ [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23], W 6+ [24,25], and Mo 6+ [26], is effective at stabilizing the cubic phase, and the conductivity at room temperature is greatly improved to 1 mS cm −1 by controlling the dopants content and optimizing Li + concentration in the garnet framework. Although a solid-state battery with an Nb-doped LLZ as SE has already been demonstrated [13,27,28], a Ta-doped LLZ showed much better chemical stability against a Li metal electrode than when Nb-doped [29,30].…”