Electrochemical corrosion drives dendrite growth at low stresses in solid-state batteries

TL;DR Summary
A Nature study on LLZO-based solid electrolytes shows dendrites propagate at stresses far below the mechanical fracture threshold, with plating-induced stresses present during growth; as current density rises, dendrite velocity increases while the stress required for propagation decreases (up to 75% lower than under purely mechanical loading). Cryogenic STEM reveals electrochemically induced electrolyte decomposition and molar-volume changes, indicating an electrochemical embrittlement mechanism that could be mitigated by controlling the phase transitions accompanying instability.
Topics:science#electrolyte-decomposition#lithium-dendrite#llzo-garnet#operando-birefringence-microscopy#solid-state-batteries#technology
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