Abstract

The blend of air stability and high lithium-ion (Li+) conductivity is not a simplistic approach to attain for sulfide-based solid-state electrolytes (SSEs), which hinders the exploitation of high energy all-solid-state lithium-sulfur batteries (ASSLSBs). Herein we report a novel lithium superionic conductor of Li7Sb0.05P2.95S10.5I0.5 as solid-state glass-ceramics electrolytes obtained by an annealing treatment in a solid-state reaction route. It systematically explores the impact of facile aliovalent dual doping into the newly synthesized solid electrolytes, which have influenced higher Li+ conductivity of 2.55 × 10−3 Scm−1 at room temperature, and wide range of voltage stability vs. Li/Li+ up to 7 V. Except that, an activation barrier of Li7Sb0.05P2.95S10.5I0.5 for Li+ migration drops expressively due to optimizing the dopant contents, and subsequently defects produced. The electrolyte also achieved significant air stability based on Hard and Soft Acid/Base (HSAB) theory. The intrinsic structural aspects of the air stability for Li7P3S11 and Li7Sb0.05P2.95S10.5I0.5 solid-state electrolytes are premeditated using a combination of ex-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, XRD as well as Raman spectroscopy and SEM. The Li2S-VGCF-SSE composite cathode with Li7Sb0.05P2.95S10.5I0.5 SSE exhibited a high initial discharge capacity of 622.3 mAhg−1 at 0.060 mAcm−2, and ASSLSB was retained over 683.3 mAh g−1 after 15th cycle at room temperature, better than pristine Li7P3S11 SSE-based cell. This research provides a novel concept on the design of air-stable and superionic conductor solid-state electrolytes for high-performance ASSLSBs.

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