Tokyo University of Science

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2023.03.06 Monday

Controlling Electric Double Layer Dynamics for Next Generation All-Solid-State Batteries

Researchers achieve carrier modulation and improved switching response speed control in these batteries

Development of all-solid-state batteries is crucial to achieve carbon neutrality. However, their high surface resistance causes these batteries to have low output, limiting their applications. To this end, researchers have employed a novel technique to investigate and modulate electric double layer dynamics at the solid/solid electrolyte interface. The researchers demonstrate unprecedented control of response speed by over two orders of magnitude, a major steppingstone towards realization of commercial all-solid-state batteries.

In our quest for clean energy and carbon neutrality, all-solid-state lithium-ion batteries (ASS-LIBs) offer considerable promise. ASS-LIBs are expected to be used in a wide range of applications including electric vehicles (EVs). However, commercial application of these batteries is currently facing a bottleneck―their output is reduced owing to their high surface resistance. Moreover, the exact mechanism of this surface resistance is hitherto unknown. Researchers have alluded it to a phenomenon called the "electric double layer" (or EDL) effect seen in colloidal substances (which are microscopic dispersions of one kind of particle in another substance). The EDL effect occurs when colloidal particles gain negative electric charge by adsorbing the negatively charged ions of the dispersion medium on their surface. "This occurs at the solid/solid electrolyte interface, posing a problem in all-solid-state lithium batteries," explains Dr. Tohru Higuchi, Associate Professor at Tokyo University of Science (TUS). Dr. Higuchi, along with colleagues Dr. Makoto Takayanagi from TUS, and Dr. Takashi Tsuchiya and Dr. Kazuya Terabe from National Institute for Materials Science in Japan, has devised a novel technique to quantitatively evaluate the EDL effect at the solid/solid electrolyte interface.

An article detailing their technique was made available online on 8 February 2023 and was published in Volume 31 of Materials Today Physics. The researchers employed an all-solid-state hydrogen-terminated diamond (H-diamond)-based EDL transistor (EDLT) to conduct Hall measurements and pulse response measurements that determined EDL charging characteristics. By inserting a nanometer-thick lithium niobate or lithium phosphate interlayer between the H-diamond and lithium solid electrolyte, the team could investigate the electrical response of the EDL effect at the interface between these two layers. The electrolyte's composition did, indeed, influence the EDL effect in a small region around the electrode interface. The EDL effect was reduced when a certain electrolyte was introduced as an interlayer between the electrode/solid electrolyte interface. EDL capacitance for the lithium phosphate/H-diamond interface was much higher compared to the lithium niobate/H-diamond interface.

Their article also explains how they improved the switching response time for charging ASS-EDLs. "The EDL has been shown to influence switching properties, so we considered that the switching response time for charging ASS-EDLs could be greatly improved by controlling the capacitance of the EDL. We used the non-ion-permeable property of diamond in the electron layer of the field-effect transistor and combined it with various lithium conductors," Dr. Higuchi narrates.

The interlayer accelerated and decelerated the EDL charging speed. The electrical response time of the EDLT was highly variable―it ranged from about 60 milliseconds (low speed switching for lithium phosphate/H-diamond interface) to about 230 microseconds (high speed switching for lithium niobate/H-diamond interface). The team, however, exhibited control over the EDL charging speed for over two orders of magnitude.

In summary, the researchers were able to achieve carrier modulation in all-solid-state devices and improved their charging characteristics. "These results from our research on the lithium-ion conductive layer are important for improving the interface resistance and may lead to the realization of all solid-state batteries with excellent charge-discharge characteristics in the future", notes an optimistic Dr. Higuchi.

Taken together, this is a major steppingstone towards controlling the interface resistance of ASS-LIBs that catalyzes their feasibility for many applications. It will also help design better solid-electrolyte-based devices, a class of gadgets which also includes neuromorphic devices.

Controlling Electric Double Layer Dynamics for Next Generation All-Solid-State Batteries

Image Title: TUS researchers demonstrate unprecedented control over response speed for next-generation all-solid-state batteries

Image Caption: Investigating the EDL effect at the solid electrolyte interface by a novel technique, researchers tuned switching response time and achieved carrier modulation at the interface between a hydrogen-terminated diamond (H-diamond) and a Li+-conducting solid electrolyte/solid interface.

Image Credit: Tohru Higuchi from Tokyo University of Science

License type: Original Content

Reference
Title of original paper  : Accelerated/decelerated dynamics of the electric double layer at hydrogen-terminated diamond/Li+ solid electrolyte interface
Journal  : Materials Today Physics
DOI  : 10.1016/j.mtphys.2023.101006
About The Tokyo University of Science

Tokyo University of Science (TUS) is a well-known and respected university, and the largest science-specialized private research university in Japan, with four campuses in central Tokyo and its suburbs and in Hokkaido. Established in 1881, the university has continually contributed to Japan's development in science through inculcating the love for science in researchers, technicians, and educators.

With a mission of "Creating science and technology for the harmonious development of nature, human beings, and society," TUS has undertaken a wide range of research from basic to applied science. TUS has embraced a multidisciplinary approach to research and undertaken intensive study in some of today's most vital fields. TUS is a meritocracy where the best in science is recognized and nurtured. It is the only private university in Japan that has produced a Nobel Prize winner and the only private university in Asia to produce Nobel Prize winners within the natural sciences field.

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About Associate Professor Tohru Higuchi
from Tokyo University of Science

Tohru Higuchi is a member of the Department of Applied Physics at Tokyo University of Science. In 1995, he received his Bachelor's degree in Applied Physics from Tokyo University of Science, where he later earned his Master's and PhD. His research focuses on functional material science, with a particular emphasis on thin-film/surface and interfacial physical characteristics, as well as inorganic industrial materials. He has published over 200 articles and earned several honors, including those for his contributions to the GREEN-2019 conference and the 2019 International Symposium on Advanced Material Research.

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Funding information

This work was in part supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI Grant Number JP20H05301 and JP22H04625 (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas 'Interface Ionics'), JP19K05279, JP19J22244 and JP21J21982 (Grant-in-Aid for JSPS Fellows). Part of this work was supported by Kurata Grants from The Hitachi Global Foundation, Yazaki Memorial Foundation for Science and Technology, and the Murata Science Foundation.

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