Abstract

Abstract The decomposition of solid electrolytes at the surface of the cathode has become one of the critical bottlenecks in the further widespread of all-solid-state batteries. To this end, we applied a fluidized bed coating method on the cathode and obtained the LiAlO2-coated NCM622 (LiAlO2@NCM622) and Al2O3-coated NCM622 (Al2O3@NCM622). The morphologies, structures, and electrochemical properties of NCM622, LiAlO2@NCM622, and Al2O3@NCM622 were characterized by SEM, EDS, ICP-AES, XRD, laser particle size analyzer, and electrochemical tests. For LiAlO2@NCM622 and Al2O3@NCM622, the coating layers are uniformly distributed on the surface of the cathode active material while the intrinsic structures of NCM622 remain unchanged after coating. Besides, the particle sizes of LiAlO2@NCM622 and Al2O3@NCM622 are larger than NCM622. Furthermore, solid-state batteries were assembled with NCM622, LiAlO2@NCM622, and Al2O3@NCM622 as cathodes, respectively, polyoxyethylene as the solid electrolyte and lithium metal as the anode. The electrochemical tests show that the assembled batteries with LiAlO2@NCM622 and Al2O3@NCM622 exhibit better cycle performance than pristine NCM622. The capacity retention decreases to 80% at the 28th cycle for NCM622, 64th cycle for LiAlO2@NCM622, and 55th cycle for Al2O3@NCM622, respectively, demonstrating that the compatibility between the surface-coated cathode and the solid electrolyte has been significantly improved. This work promotes the application of surface modification technology and paves the way toward next-generation solid-state batteries.

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