Separator, method of manufacturing the same and battery using the same
US-2015372275-A1 · Dec 24, 2015 · US
US9502729B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9502729-B2 |
| Application number | US-201213597871-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Aug 29, 2012 |
| Priority date | Aug 29, 2012 |
| Publication date | Nov 22, 2016 |
| Grant date | Nov 22, 2016 |
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An ion-conducting composite electrolyte is provided comprising path-engineered ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles and a solid polymeric matrix. The path-engineered particles are characterized by an anisotropic crystalline structure and the ionic conductivity of the crystalline structure in a preferred conductivity direction H associated with one of the crystal planes of the path-engineered particle is larger than the ionic conductivity of the crystalline structure in a reduced conductivity direction L associated with another of the crystal planes of the path-engineered particle. The path-engineered particles are sized and positioned in the polymeric matrix such that a majority of the path-engineered particles breach both of the opposite major faces of the matrix body and are oriented in the polymeric matrix such that the preferred conductivity direction H is more closely aligned with a minimum path length spanning a thickness of the matrix body than is the reduced conductivity direction L.
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What is claimed is: 1. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte comprising ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles and a solid polymeric matrix, wherein: the solid polymeric matrix comprises a first major face, a second major face opposing the first major face, a matrix body defined between the first and second major face, and a minimum path length x spanning a thickness of the matrix body; the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are characterized by an anisotropic crystalline structure comprising a plurality of crystal planes; each ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle of a majority of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprises a first crystal plane and a second crystal plane; the first crystal plane extends in a direction H and comprises a first ionic conductivity in the direction H; the second crystal plane extends in a direction L different from the direction H and comprises a second ionic conductivity in the direction L; the first ionic conductivity in the direction H is larger than the second ionic conductivity in the direction L; each ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle of the majority of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles is oriented in the solid polymeric matrix such that the direction H is more closely aligned with the minimum path length x than is the direction L; and each ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle of the majority of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles is sized and positioned in the solid polymeric matrix to breach both the first and the second major faces of the solid polymeric matrix. 2. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ionic conductivity of the crystalline structure in the direction H is approximately one order of magnitude larger than the ionic conductivity of the crystalline structure in the direction L. 3. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein: the majority of ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are sized such that a size dimension of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle in the direction H is smaller than a size dimension of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle in the direction L; and the difference in the respective size dimensions of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle encourages self-alignment of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles in the solid polymeric matrix, where the direction H is more closely aligned with the minimum path length x spanning a thickness of the matrix body than is the direction L. 4. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein: the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are characterized by a hexagonal crystalline structure; the ionic conductivity of the hexagonal crystalline structure in the direction H lying in the plane of the crystal is larger than the ionic conductivity of the hexagonal crystalline structure in the direction L normal to the plane of the crystal; and a majority of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are oriented in the solid polymeric matrix such that the minimum path length x spanning a thickness of the matrix body is more closely aligned with the direction H than with the direction L. 5. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein: the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are characterized by a hexagonal crystalline structure; the ionic conductivity of the hexagonal crystalline structure in the direction H lying in the plane of the crystal is larger than the ionic conductivity of the hexagonal crystalline structure in the direction L normal to the plane of the crystal; and approximately all of the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are oriented in the polymeric matrix such that a minimum path length x spanning a thickness of the matrix body is more closely aligned with the direction H than with the direction L. 6. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein a majority of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise internal inclusions and grain boundaries and are oriented in the solid polymeric matrix to comprise a breaching cross section defining a cross-body, linear ion-conducting path that is unimpeded by one or more secondary phase inclusions and the grain boundaries of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle. 7. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein: respective ones of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise a single crystal majority, by volume, in each ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle; the single crystal majority is free of grain boundaries; and a remaining volume of respective ones of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprises primary phase inclusions of distinct crystal orientation, secondary phase inclusions, pores, or combinations thereof. 8. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein a majority of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise grain boundaries that span less than a majority of the breaching cross section of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolytes particles in a direction approximately parallel to the major faces of the matrix body. 9. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein a majority of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise internal inclusions, grain boundaries, and closed pores and are oriented in the solid polymeric matrix to comprise a breaching cross section defining a cross-body, linear ion-conducting path that is unimpeded by one or more secondary phase inclusions, the grain boundaries, and the closed pores of the face-breaching, ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particle. 10. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise an ion-conducting ceramic. 11. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise a lithium ion-conducting ceramic. 12. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 11 wherein the lithium ion-conducting ceramic comprises lithium-aluminum titanium phosphate (LATP) or a derivative thereof. 13. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 12 wherein one or more internal inclusions comprise inclusions of aluminum phosphate, titanium dioxide, aluminum oxide, or combinations thereof. 14. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles comprise an ion-conducting ceramic selected from lithium metal phosphates, sodium zirconia phosphates, sodium beta alumina, fluorites, and ceramic oxides with garnet-type crystalline structures. 15. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles are sintered. 16. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ion-conducting ceramic electrolyte particles define an average size (d 50 ) of between approximately 10 μm and approximately 1 mm with a size dispersion ((d 90 −d 10 )/d 50 ) that is less than approximately 1.0. 17. An ion-conducting composite electrolyte as claimed in claim 1 wherein the ion-conducting composite electrolyte is characterized by an ionic conductivity that is on the order of approximately 10 −4 S/cm or greater.
Ionic conductivity · CPC title
Ceramics · CPC title
based on ceramics · CPC title
characterised by the materials used as electrolytes, e.g. mixed inorganic/organic electrolytes · CPC title
Cross-Sectional Technologies · mapped topic
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