Abstract

Lithium-ion batteries currently suffer from low capacity and fast degradation under fast charging and/or low temperatures. Inthiswork, a colloid liquid electrolyte (CLE) is designed, where the trace amount of lithium thiocarbonate (LTC) colloids in commercial carbonate electrolyte (1m LiPF6 in ethylene carbonate/dimethyl carbonate) not only boosts up σLi+ but also improves the Li+ transfer kinetics at LiNi0.8 Co0.15 Al0.05 O2 (NCA) cathode/electrolyte interface. The competitive coordination of LTCs with anions and solvents facilitates the dissociation of lithium salts and Li+ decoupling, dramatically enhancing the σLi+ (15 to 4.5 mS cm-1 at 30 and -20°C, respectively); meanwhile, the desolvation process is accelerated. It demonstrates that LTC colloids induce an≈5nm ultrathin Li2 CO3 -rich cathode electrolyte interfaceand infuse the grain boundary of NCA particles, enhancing interfacial Li+ transfer and inhibiting the particle cracks during cycling. Consequently, the Li||CLE||NCA battery delivers a maximum capacity of 135 mAh g-1 at a 10 C rate with 80% retention after 2000 cycles. Moreover, the fast-charging capability under a sub-zero environment is proved (122 mAh g-1 with 90% retention after 400 cycles at 2 C and -10°C). This strategy for tailoring the interfacial charge transfer appears generalizable and can practically be extended to next-generation energy-storage systems.

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