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Semi-Solid-State Battery Breaks Through the 100,000-Yuan Market, SAIC MG4 Launches New Era at 99,800 Yuan

iconSep 16, 2025 15:06
[NCM sulfide electrolyte/Ag@C] NCM, sulfide electrolyte, and Ag@C respectively represent the positive electrode material, electrolyte, and negative electrode structure in solid-state batteries. Their combination is one of the core directions in the current research and development of high-energy-density batteries.

SMM September 16 News:

Key points: [NCM sulfide electrolyte/Ag@C] NCM, sulfide electrolyte, and Ag@C respectively represent the positive electrode material, electrolyte, and negative electrode structure in solid-state batteries. Their combination is one of the core directions in the current research and development of high-energy-density batteries.

In all-solid-state battery technology, the combination of using NCM (nickel-cobalt-manganese) as the cathode material, sulfide as the electrolyte, and Ag@C (silver-coated carbon) as the anode material is a common configuration. This combination leverages the high ionic conductivity of sulfide electrolytes and the high capacity and stability of silver-coated carbon anodes. According to search results, the combination of sulfide electrolytes and NCM cathode materials reacts at high temperatures, generating a large amount of SO₂ accompanied by a massive release of heat. This reaction is referred to as the gas-solid reaction failure pathway. Additionally, both sulfide electrolytes and NCM811 exhibit significant exothermic reactions. Among them, Li₃PS₄ and Li₇P₃S₁₁ start to react at 200°C, and under rapid heating conditions, NCM811 + sulfide solid electrolytes can undergo deflagration. These characteristics indicate that this combination has potential application prospects in all-solid-state batteries, but at the same time, in-depth research and optimization of safety are required.

I. NCM (Lithium Nickel Cobalt Manganese Oxide)
NCM is a high-nickel ternary cathode material with the general formula LiNiₓCoᵧMn₁₋ₓ₋ᵧO₂, where x is typically ≥0.6 (e.g., NCM622, NCM811), and it has core advantages.
1. High Energy Density: When the nickel content exceeds 80%, the theoretical capacity can reach 200-210 mAh/g, which is more than 50% higher than traditional LFP.
2. High Working Voltage: The average discharge voltage is about 3.7-3.8 V. When matched with a sulfide electrolyte, the battery energy density can reach 300-450 Wh/kg.
3. Cost Efficiency: The cobalt content is reduced (e.g., only 10% in NCM811), resulting in a cost reduction of about 30% compared to NCM111.
However, NCM faces interfacial issues when in direct contact with sulfide electrolytes:
1. Chemical Side Reactions: High-nickel NCM can oxidize sulfide electrolytes (e.g., Li₆PS₅Cl) at high voltages (>4.2 V), producing high-impedance products such as Li₂SO₄ and P₂S₅, leading to a sharp increase in interfacial resistance (up to thousands of Ω·cm²).
2. Volume Expansion: NCM undergoes a volume change of about 10-15% during charge and discharge. Contact with rigid sulfide electrolytes can generate mechanical stress, causing interfacial delamination.

II. Sulfide Electrolytes
Sulfide electrolytes are a class of solid-state electrolytes with sulfur as the primary anion. Typical examples include:
1. Argyrodite-Type (e.g., Li₆PS₅Cl): Room-temperature ionic conductivity as high as 10⁻³-10⁻² S/cm, close to that of liquid electrolytes, and soft texture (Young's modulus 20-30 GPa), ensuring good contact with electrode interfaces.
2. LGPS-Type (e.g., Li₁₀GeP₂S₁₂): Through element doping (e.g., Sb⁵⁺, O²⁻), ionic conductivity can be further increased to 25 mS/cm, and air stability is enhanced (20-fold improvement at -10°C dew point).
Their core advantages are:
1. Ultra-High Ionic Conductivity: Three-dimensional lithium-ion transport channels (e.g., the "48h-16e-48h" path in Li₅.₅PS₄.₅Cl₀.₇₅Br₀.₇₅) ensure fast charging and discharging, supporting 20C rates (full charge in 10 minutes).
2. High Safety: No liquid electrolytes, thermal decomposition temperature >200°C, passing nail penetration tests (no open flame) and hot box tests (no explosion at 130°C). However, sulfide electrolytes face the following challenges:
1. Air sensitivity: They readily react with water to generate H₂S gas (e.g., Li₆PS₅Cl + H₂O → LiOH + Li₂SO₄ + H₂S↑), requiring production in an inert gas environment with a dew point ≤ -40°C.
2. Interfacial stability: When in contact with NCM cathodes, transition metal ions (e.g., Ni²⁺) catalyze sulfide decomposition, forming an insulating space charge layer (SCL) that impedes ion transport.

III. Ag@C (Silver-Carbon Core-Shell Structure)
Ag@C is a composite functional material formed by encapsulating silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) in a carbon matrix to create a core-shell structure. Its functions include: anode host + volume buffering
1. Anode host:
1.1 Lithium deposition guidance: Ag’s high electrical conductivity (6.3×10⁷ S/m) and low nucleation barrier (0.12 eV) promote uniform lithium deposition and suppress dendrite growth. Samsung SDI’s Ag@C composite anode demonstrated >90% capacity retention after 1,000 cycles and a critical current density of 10 mA/cm².
1.2 Volume buffering: The carbon matrix (e.g., graphene, carbon nanotubes) accommodates lithium metal volume expansion (200%), reducing interfacial stress.
2. Interfacial modification:
2.1 Cathode-side application: Ag@C can serve as a surface coating on NCM, reducing interfacial impedance through Ag’s catalytic effect. For example, the interfacial resistance of Ag@C-modified NCM811 with Li₆PS₅Cl decreased from 800 Ω·cm² to 150 Ω·cm².
2.2 Electrolyte modification: Adding Ag@C to sulfide electrolytes (e.g., Li₆PS₅Cl/Ag@C composite) enhances electronic insulation (preventing internal short circuits) and improves mechanical strength (puncture resistance >50 N/cm).

IV. Synergistic Mechanism
1. Interface optimization between NCM and sulfide electrolyte
Surface coating: Coating NCM with a LiNbO₃-Li₃BO₃ composite layer (thickness ≤10 nm) leverages LiNbO₃’s high ionic conductivity (10⁻⁶ S/cm) and Li₃BO₃’s chemical stability to suppress sulfide decomposition. For instance, the SC-Ni92@LiNbO₃-Li₃BO₃/Li₆PS₅Cl battery exhibited 88.4% capacity retention after 100 cycles at 1C and a discharge capacity of 150.1 mAh/g at a 5C rate. Sulfide Coating: A sulfide layer (e.g., Li₂S-P₂S₅) is formed on the NCM surface via low-temperature solid-state method, blocking direct contact and mitigating the space charge layer effect. The SC-Ni90-0.2%S/Li₆PS₅Cl battery exhibited a capacity retention of 87% after 500 cycles at 1C, with an areal capacity of 11.44 mAh/cm².

2. Role of Ag@C in the Anode
Lithium Metal Deposition Regulation: Ag@C serves as a current collector coating, where AgNPs preferentially form Ag-Li alloy (Li₃Ag) with lithium, guiding uniform lithium growth along carbon matrix pores and preventing dendrite penetration. Samsung SDI's Ag@C composite anode demonstrated a Coulombic efficiency >99.8% after 1,000 cycles at a volumetric energy density of 900 Wh/L.

Side Reaction Suppression: The carbon matrix adsorbs sulfur species (e.g., S²⁻) generated from sulfide decomposition, reducing Li₂S deposition and extending battery life. The Ag@C/Li₆PS₅Cl/Li symmetric cell stably cycled for over 1,000 hours at a current density of 1 mA/cm².

V. Typical Battery Structure and Performance
1. Cathode: NCM811@LiNbO₃-Li₃BO₃
Design: Monocrystalline NCM811 coated with a 10 nm thick LiNbO₃-Li₃BO₃ composite layer to enhance interfacial stability.
Performance: When paired with Li₆PS₅Cl electrolyte, the battery showed >85% capacity retention after 500 cycles at 4.3 V high voltage, with an energy density of 350 Wh/kg.

2. Electrolyte: Li₆PS₅Cl/Ag@C Composite Material
Preparation: Ag@C (5 wt%) dry-mixed with Li₆PS₅Cl and hot-pressed into form, thickness 20 μm.
Performance: Room-temperature ionic conductivity of 1.2×10⁻² S/cm, bending modulus increased from 25 GPa to 38 GPa, and puncture resistance improved by 40%.

3. Anode: Ag@C/Li Metal Composite Structure
Process: Ag@C layer (thickness 5-10 μm) deposited on copper foil, followed by electrochemical deposition to form a lithium metal layer (thickness 20 μm).
Performance: Critical current density of 12 mA/cm², lithium dendrite penetration time >1,000 hours after 1,000 cycles, and volumetric energy density of 942 Wh/L.

VI. Industrialisation Progress and Challenges
Top-Tier Enterprise Layout: Samsung SDI + CATLSamsung SDI: The sulfide battery with Ag@C composite anode has entered the pilot stage, with mass production planned for 2027, offering an energy density of 900 Wh/L and supporting an EV driving range of 800 km.
CATL: Developing an NCM@LiNbO₃/Li₆PS₅Cl battery, with samples to be launched in 2025 and a cycle life exceeding 2,000 cycles.
Technical Bottlenecks: Cost + Low-Temperature Performance
Cost Control: Lithium sulfide (Li₂S) prices are as high as $150/kg, and Ag@C material costs are approximately $80/kWh. Scaling up production (e.g., dry coating) is required to reduce costs below $100/kWh.
Low-Temperature Performance: The ionic conductivity of sulfide electrolytes drops to 10⁻⁴ S/cm at -20°C, necessitating optimization via nanocomposites (e.g., Li₆PS₅Cl/Al₂O₃) or plasticizers (e.g., ionic liquids).
Future Directions:
Material Innovation: Developing cobalt-free NCM (e.g., LiNiO₂) and all-sulfide cathodes (e.g., Li₂S/FeS₂) to further increase energy density beyond 500 Wh/kg.
Process Breakthrough: Adopting roll-to-roll dry stacking technology to enhance sulfide battery production speed from 0.5 m/min to 5 m/min and yield from 65% to 95%.
Summary: The combination of NCM sulfide electrolyte/Ag@C is the mainstream direction in current solid-state battery R&D. Leveraging NCM's high energy density, sulfide's high ionic conductivity, and Ag@C's interface regulation, overall battery performance can be comprehensively improved. Despite challenges in interface stability and cost, breakthroughs in material design and process innovation are expected to enable large-scale commercialization by 2030, driving revolutionary changes in the EV and ESS sectors. According to SMM forecasts, all-solid-state battery shipments are projected to reach 13.5 GWh by 2030, with semi-solid-state battery shipments at 160 GWh.

**Note:** For further details or inquiries regarding solid-state battery development, please contact:
Phone: 021-20707860 (or WeChat: 13585549799)

Contact: Chaoxing Yang. Thank you!

Battery Industry
Solid-state Battery
Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market exchanges, and relying on SMM's internal database model, for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

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