Lithium-rich sulfide Li2Ti1−xSixS3 cathode materials optimized through Si-doping for high-capacity all-solid-state lithium-ion batteries†
Abstract
High-capacity lithium-rich sulfide cathodes with superior conductivity over S or Li2S materials are considered for all-solid-state lithium-ion batteries (ASSLBs), yet their capacity and rate performance require further improvement. In this work, lithium-rich sulfide cathodes Li2Ti1−xSixS3 with a disordered rocksalt structure and layered structure are synthesized by high-energy ball milling and high-temperature annealing, respectively. The Si doping strategy is implemented to tune the microstructure of the lithium-rich sulfide cathode and to obtain high capacity and improved ionic conductivity. The partial replacement of Ti with Si increases the cationic disorder of rocksalt and layered Li2Ti1−xSixS3, which further activates the anionic redox activity to enable a higher capacity than Li2TiS3. Moreover, the robust Si–S bonds induce distortions in the LiS6 octahedral and adjacent tetrahedral vacancies, broadening the Li+ migration channels in the Li+ percolation network and enabling rapid Li+ migration capability. The optimized rocksalt Li2Ti1−xSixS3 exhibits a higher specific capacity of 361 mA h g−1 than rocksalt Li2TiS3 (295 mA h g−1) at 0.3 C (120 mA g−1), while the layered Li2Ti1−xSixS3 has a higher capacity of 260 mA h g−1 than the layered Li2TiS3 (140 mA h g−1) at 0.3 C. An argyrodite-type sulfide solid-state electrolyte Li5.25PS4.25ClBr0.75 with high Li+ conductivity (7.64 mS cm−1) is designed to match with the rocksalt Li2Ti1−xSixS3 cathode, and the assembled ASSLB achieves a high areal capacity density of 9.79 mA h cm−2. The Si doping to tune the disordered structure provides an effective improvement approach for high-capacity rocksalt or layered sulfide cathodes and high-energy density ASSLBs.