ALL-SOLID-STATE SECONDARY BATTERY
An all-solid-state secondary battery was developed featuring an intermediate layer between the negative electrode and solid electrolyte layer to suppress crack formation during initial cycling.
The intermediate layer comprises fibrillated PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene) and Li6PS5Cl (argyrodite-type sulfide electrolyte) in a 5 : 95 mass ratio. The mixture was rolled at 23°C using 100 mm diameter rollers to form a 0.30 mm thick sheet (subsequently compressed during final assembly at 6000 kgf/cm2), with the rolling process inducing fibrillation of PTFE particles into fibrous structures.
The negative electrode comprises TiNb2O7, graphene, carbon nanotubes, PTFE particles, and Li6PS5Cl in a 68 : 8.8 : 0.2 : 2 : 21 mass ratio. The positive electrode contains LiCoO2 coated with a LiNbO3 reaction inhibition layer (2 mass% loading), mixed with vapor-grown carbon fibers and Li6PS5Cl (66 : 4 : 30 ratio).
The solid electrolyte layer consists of Li6PS5Cl pressed at 1000 kgf/cm2. The complete assembly was formed by sequential pressing of positive electrode, solid electrolyte layer, intermediate layer, and negative electrode in a powder molding die (6000 kgf/cm2, room temperature).
The battery exhibits a first-cycle coulombic efficiency of 84.5% (0.1 C charge to 3.2 V with constant voltage cutoff at 0.01 C, followed by 0.1 C discharge, 25°C). Comparative cells without the intermediate layer show significantly lower efficiency (79.3%). No cycle life metrics were identified.
