Abstract

Recently, a Li-ion solid electrolyte material LiTa2PO8 (LTPO) which exhibits a high bulk ionic conductivity of 1.6 × 10–3 S/cm and a total ionic conductivity of 2.5 × 10–4 S/cm was developed. In a previous study, we sintered the LTPO pellet, which has a high relative density of 82% and a total ionic conductivity of 1.05 × 10–5 S/cm at room temperature via a cold sintering process (CSP). In this study, to achieve the ionic conductivity comparable to LTPO ceramic electrolytes obtained via high-temperature sintering, a Li2O–B2O3–Li2SO4 amorphous layer was formed at the interface between LTPO particles via the CSP, and the microstructure and electrochemical properties of LTPO with the Li2O–B2O3–Li2SO4 amorphous layer were investigated. Moreover, humidity acceleration tests were conducted to confirm the chemical stability of the pellet under ambient humidity conditions. It was found that pellets of LTPO prepared via the CSP exhibited a relative density of 85–87%, which is comparable to the density of high-temperature sintered pellets, and high adhesion between LTPO particles was observed due to the Li2O–B2O3–Li2SO4 amorphous layer forming a particle interface. LTPO pellets with the Li2O–B2O3–Li2SO4 amorphous boundary layer exhibited a high grain boundary ionic conductivity of 7.47 × 10–5 S/cm, a total ionic conductivity of 1.07 × 10–4 S/cm, and an extremely low activation energy of 0.215 eV. After humidity acceleration testing, the pellets showed good chemical stability against humidity, and the grain boundary and total ionic conductivities were increased by approximately 1.3 times to 9.21 × 10–4 and 1.38 × 10–4 S/cm, respectively. These results provide evidence that introducing an amorphous layer at the particle interface is a solution to the issues associated with low grain boundary ionic conductivity in ceramic-based solid electrolytes.

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