Antimony-doped NASICON-type solid electrolyte with homogeneous sodium-ion flux for high-temperature solid-state sodium batteries

Authors
Akbar, MuhammadMoeez, IqraBhatti, Ali Hussain UmarKim, Young HwanKim, MingonyKim, Ji-YoungJeong, JiwonPark, Jae HoChung, Kyung Yoon
Issue Date
2025-08
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Chemical Engineering Journal, v.517
Abstract
High operation temperatures increase the sodium-ion conductivity of solid-state sodium batteries but may cause early short-circuiting due to sodium-ion flux inhomogeneity and rapid sodium dendrite penetration caused by poor contacts between solid electrolytes particles. This study characterizes Sb-doped Na3Zr2Si2PO12 (Na3.1Zr1.9Sb0.1Si2PO12, NZSbSP) as a prospective solid-state electrolyte and determines its compatibility with sodium-metal electrodes by examining the cycling performance of symmetric Na/NZSbSP/Na cells at 60 degrees C. Compared with Na3Zr2Si2PO12, NZSbSP exhibits a higher sodium-ion conductivity and sodium-ion transference number while featuring a lower electronic conductivity and activation energy for sodium-ion conduction. The Na/NZSbSP/Na symmetric cell sustains 3055 h of cycling at 0.1 mA cm- 2, which reflects the superior compatibility of NZSbSP with sodium metal. The postmortem analyses of NZSbSP after high-temperature operation reveal suppressed dendrite formation and the homogeneity of the sodium-ion flux at the NZSbSP-sodium metal interface. A Na0.67Fe0.5Mn0.5O2/NZSbSP/Na coin cell exhibits a discharge capacity retention of 58.84 % after 50 cycles as well as a high coulombic efficiency and sodium-ion diffusion coefficient. The oxidation of Sb during cycling is shown to prevent electrolyte degradation during high-temperature operation and stabilize the electrode interface. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using NZSbSP in solid-state sodium batteries operated at high temperatures.
Keywords
CONDUCTIVITY; PERFORMANCE; INTERFACE; DENDRITES; TRANSPORT; Sodium-ion conductivity; Sb-doped NASICON-type solid electrolyte; Sodium dendrite tolerance; Solid-state sodium battery; High-temperature operation; Structural stability
ISSN
1385-8947
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/152697
DOI
10.1016/j.cej.2025.164300
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KIST Article > Others
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