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Featured researches published by Xue-Qiang Zhang.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Lithiophilic Sites in Doped Graphene Guide Uniform Lithium Nucleation for Dendrite-Free Lithium Metal Anodes

Rui Zhang; Xiao‐Ru Chen; Xiang Chen; Xin-Bing Cheng; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Chong Yan; Qiang Zhang

Lithium (Li) metal is the most promising electrode for next-generation rechargeable batteries. However, the challenges induced by Li dendrites on a working Li metal anode hinder the practical applications of Li metal batteries. Herein, nitrogen (N) doped graphene was adopted as the Li plating matrix to regulate Li metal nucleation and suppress dendrite growth. The N-containing functional groups, such as pyridinic and pyrrolic nitrogen in the N-doped graphene, are lithiophilic, which guide the metallic Li nucleation causing the metal to distribute uniformly on the anode surface. As a result, the N-doped graphene modified Li metal anode exhibits a dendrite-free morphology during repeated Li plating and demonstrates a high Coulombic efficiency of 98 % for near 200 cycles.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

An anion-immobilized composite electrolyte for dendrite-free lithium metal anodes

Chen-Zi Zhao; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Xin-Bing Cheng; Rui Zhang; Rui Xu; Peng-Yu Chen; Hong-Jie Peng; Jia-Qi Huang; Qiang Zhang

Significance The Li metal electrode is regarded as a “Holy Grail” anode for next-generation batteries due to its extremely high theoretical capacity and lowest reduction potential. Unfortunately, uncontrolled dendrite growth leads to serious safety issues. This work realizes a dendrite-free Li metal anode by introducing an anion-immobilized composite solid electrolyte, where anions are tethered to polymer chains and ceramic particles. Immobilized anions contribute to uniform distribution of Li ions and dendrite-free Li deposition. The flexible electrolyte can be applied in all–solid-state Li metal batteries with excellent specific capacities. This work demonstrates a concept to adjust ion distribution based on solid-state electrolytes for safe dendrite-free Li anodes, paving the way to practical Li metal batteries. Lithium metal is strongly regarded as a promising electrode material in next-generation rechargeable batteries due to its extremely high theoretical specific capacity and lowest reduction potential. However, the safety issue and short lifespan induced by uncontrolled dendrite growth have hindered the practical applications of lithium metal anodes. Hence, we propose a flexible anion-immobilized ceramic–polymer composite electrolyte to inhibit lithium dendrites and construct safe batteries. Anions in the composite electrolyte are tethered by a polymer matrix and ceramic fillers, inducing a uniform distribution of space charges and lithium ions that contributes to a dendrite-free lithium deposition. The dissociation of anions and lithium ions also helps to reduce the polymer crystallinity, rendering stable and fast transportation of lithium ions. Ceramic fillers in the electrolyte extend the electrochemically stable window to as wide as 5.5 V and provide a barrier to short circuiting for realizing safe batteries at elevated temperature. The anion-immobilized electrolyte can be applied in all–solid-state batteries and exhibits a small polarization of 15 mV. Cooperated with LiFePO4 and LiNi0.5Co0.2Mn0.3O2 cathodes, the all–solid-state lithium metal batteries render excellent specific capacities of above 150 mAh⋅g−1 and well withstand mechanical bending. These results reveal a promising opportunity for safe and flexible next-generation lithium metal batteries.


Nature Communications | 2017

Nanodiamonds suppress the growth of lithium dendrites

Xin-Bing Cheng; Meng-Qiang Zhao; Chi Chen; Amanda Pentecost; Kathleen Maleski; Tyler S. Mathis; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Qiang Zhang; Jianjun Jiang; Yury Gogotsi

Lithium metal has been regarded as the future anode material for high-energy-density rechargeable batteries due to its favorable combination of negative electrochemical potential and high theoretical capacity. However, uncontrolled lithium deposition during lithium plating/stripping results in low Coulombic efficiency and severe safety hazards. Herein, we report that nanodiamonds work as an electrolyte additive to co-deposit with lithium ions and produce dendrite-free lithium deposits. First-principles calculations indicate that lithium prefers to adsorb onto nanodiamond surfaces with a low diffusion energy barrier, leading to uniformly deposited lithium arrays. The uniform lithium deposition morphology renders enhanced electrochemical cycling performance. The nanodiamond-modified electrolyte can lead to a stable cycling of lithium | lithium symmetrical cells up to 150 and 200 h at 2.0 and 1.0 mA cm–2, respectively. The nanodiamond co-deposition can significantly alter the lithium plating behavior, affording a promising route to suppress lithium dendrite growth in lithium metal-based batteries.Lithium metal is an ideal anode material for rechargeable batteries but suffer from the growth of lithium dendrites and low Coulombic efficiency. Here the authors show that nanodiamonds serve as an electrolyte additive to co-deposit with lithium metal and suppress the formation of dendrites.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Columnar Lithium Metal Anodes

Xue-Qiang Zhang; Xiang Chen; Rui Xu; Xin-Bing Cheng; Hong-Jie Peng; Rui Zhang; Jia-Qi Huang; Qiang Zhang

The rechargeable lithium metal anode is of utmost importance for high-energy-density batteries. Regulating the deposition/dissolution characteristics of Li metal is critical in both fundamental researches and practical applications. In contrast to gray Li deposits featured with dendritic and mossy morphologies, columnar and uniform Li is herein plated on lithium-fluoride (LiF)-protected copper (Cu) current collectors. The electrochemical properties strongly depended on the microscale morphologies of deposited Li, which were further embodied as macroscale colors. The as-obtained ultrathin and columnar Li anodes contributed to stable cycling in working batteries with a dendrite-free feature. This work deepens the fundamental understanding of the role of LiF in the nucleation/growth of Li and provides emerging approaches to stabilize rechargeable Li metal anodes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Ion–Solvent Complexes Promote Gas Evolution from Electrolytes on a Sodium Metal Anode

Xiang Chen; Xin Shen; Bo Li; Hong-Jie Peng; Xin-Bing Cheng; Bo-Quan Li; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Jia-Qi Huang; Qiang Zhang

Lithium and sodium metal batteries are considered as promising next-generation energy storage devices due to their ultrahigh energy densities. The high reactivity of alkali metal toward organic solvents and salts results in side reactions, which further lead to undesirable electrolyte depletion, cell failure, and evolution of flammable gas. Herein, first-principles calculations and in situ optical microscopy are used to study the mechanism of organic electrolyte decomposition and gas evolution on a sodium metal anode. Once complexed with sodium ions, solvent molecules show a reduced LUMO, which facilitates the electrolyte decomposition and gas evolution. Such a general mechanism is also applicable to lithium and other metal anodes. We uncover the critical role of ion-solvent complexation for the stability of alkali metal anodes, reveal the mechanism of electrolyte gassing, and provide a mechanistic guidance to electrolyte and lithium/sodium anode design for safe rechargeable batteries.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Dual‐Layered Film Protected Lithium Metal Anode to Enable Dendrite‐Free Lithium Deposition

Chong Yan; Xin-Bing Cheng; Yang Tian; Xiang Chen; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Wen‐Jun Li; Jia-Qi Huang; Qiang Zhang

Lithium metal batteries (such as lithium-sulfur, lithium-air, solid state batteries with lithium metal anode) are highly considered as promising candidates for next-generation energy storage systems. However, the unstable interfaces between lithium anode and electrolyte definitely induce the undesired and uncontrollable growth of lithium dendrites, which results in the short-circuit and thermal runaway of the rechargeable batteries. Herein, a dual-layered film is built on a Li metal anode by the immersion of lithium plates into the fluoroethylene carbonate solvent. The ionic conductive film exhibits a compact dual-layered feature with organic components (ROCO2 Li and ROLi) on the top and abundant inorganic components (Li2 CO3 and LiF) in the bottom. The dual-layered interface can protect the Li metal anode from the corrosion of electrolytes and regulate the uniform deposition of Li to achieve a dendrite-free Li metal anode. This work demonstrates the concept of rational construction of dual-layered structured interfaces for safe rechargeable batteries through facile surface modification of Li metal anodes. This not only is critically helpful to comprehensively understand the functional mechanism of fluoroethylene carbonate but also affords a facile and efficient method to protect Li metal anodes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Lithium Nitrate Solvation Chemistry in Carbonate Electrolyte Sustains High‐Voltage Lithium Metal Batteries

Chong Yan; Yuxing Yao; Xiang Chen; Xin-Bing Cheng; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Jia-Qi Huang; Qiang Zhang

The lithium metal anode is regarded as a promising candidate in next-generation energy storage devices. Lithium nitrate (LiNO3 ) is widely applied as an effective additive in ether electrolyte to increase the interfacial stability in batteries containing lithium metal anodes. However, because of its poor solubility LiNO3 is rarely utilized in the high-voltage window provided by carbonate electrolyte. Dissolution of LiNO3 in carbonate electrolyte is realized through an effective solvation regulation strategy. LiNO3 can be directly dissolved in an ethylene carbonate/diethyl carbonate electrolyte mixture by adding trace amounts of copper fluoride as a dissolution promoter. LiNO3 protects the Li metal anode in a working high-voltage Li metal battery. When a LiNi0.80 Co0.15 Al0.05 O2 cathode is paired with a Li metal anode, an extraordinary capacity retention of 53 % is achieved after 300 cycles (13 % after 200 cycles for LiNO3 -free electrolyte) and a very high average Coulombic efficiency above 99.5 % is achieved at 0.5 C. The solvation chemistry of LiNO3 -containing carbonate electrolyte may sustain high-voltage Li metal anodes operating in corrosive carbonate electrolytes.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2017

Fluoroethylene Carbonate Additives to Render Uniform Li Deposits in Lithium Metal Batteries

Xue-Qiang Zhang; Xin-Bing Cheng; Xiang Chen; Chong Yan; Qiang Zhang


Journal of Energy Chemistry | 2016

Nanostructured energy materials for electrochemical energy conversion and storage: A review

Xue-Qiang Zhang; Xin-Bing Cheng; Qiang Zhang


Advanced Functional Materials | 2018

Artificial Soft–Rigid Protective Layer for Dendrite‐Free Lithium Metal Anode

Rui Xu; Xue-Qiang Zhang; Xin-Bing Cheng; Hong-Jie Peng; Chen-Zi Zhao; Chong Yan; Jia-Qi Huang

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Jia-Qi Huang

Beijing Institute of Technology

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Chong Yan

Beijing Institute of Technology

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Rui Xu

Beijing Institute of Technology

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