固体電池の亀裂進展を測定する新技術を開発(Why solid-state batteries keep short-circuiting)

2026-03-25 マサチューセッツ工科大学(MIT)

マサチューセッツ工科大学の研究は、全固体電池で発生する短絡(ショート)の原因を解明した。従来はリチウムデンドライト(針状結晶)の成長が主因と考えられていたが、本研究では固体電解質内部の微小欠陥や応力集中が電流の局所集中を引き起こし、短絡につながることを示した。実験とモデル解析により、材料内部の不均一性が電池性能と安全性に大きく影響することが明らかとなった。これにより、欠陥制御や材料設計の最適化が重要であるとされ、次世代電池の信頼性向上に向けた指針が示された。

固体電池の亀裂進展を測定する新技術を開発(Why solid-state batteries keep short-circuiting)
Researchers used a new visual technique to measure stress in a material as a dendrite crack grows. Here, the four graphs have the same data with different color schemes. Brighter colors correspond to higher stress, and a bowtie-shaped pattern can be seen at the crack tip.Credits:Image: Courtesy of the researchers

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固体電解質中では、デンドライトの成長に伴って電気化学的腐食が発生する Electrochemical corrosion accompanies dendrite growth in solid electrolytes

Cole D. Fincher,Colin Gilgenbach,Christian Roach,Rachel Osmundsen,Aubrey Penn,Michael D. Thouless,W. Craig Carter,Brian W. Sheldon,James M. LeBeau & Yet-Ming Chiang
Nature  Published:25 March 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-026-10279-z

Abstract

Charging rates, cycling performance and safety of solid-state batteries using metal negative electrodes are often limited by dendrites1,2,3, the growth of which depends on coupling between electrochemical and mechanical driving forces. Previously, it has been assumed that dendrites propagate when plating-induced stresses reach the fracture stress of the solid electrolyte. Here we show that dendrites can propagate at far lower stresses. Using operando birefringence microscopy4, we directly measure stresses around growing dendrites in garnet Li6.6La3Zr1.6Ta0.4O12, a highly stable solid electrolyte5,6,7. Plating-induced stresses are present throughout growth and approach the mechanical fracture stress for the slowest-growing dendrites. As current densities and dendrite velocities increase, the stresses accompanying dendrite growth surprisingly decrease, with dendrite propagation occurring at stresses up to 75% lower than under mechanical load alone. Cryogenic scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) of dendrites propagated at high current reveals electrolyte decomposition to new phases, associated with which is a net molar volume contraction. The electrochemically induced mode of embrittlement may be mitigated through understanding and control of the nature of phase transitions accompanying instability.

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