A groundbreaking study jointly conducted by researchers from TU Wien, Humboldt-University Berlin, and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB) has unveiled critical insights into degradation mechanisms in all-solid-state batteries (SSBs). These batteries, celebrated for their superior energy density and intrinsic safety compared to traditional liquid electrolyte-based cells, are plagued by rapid capacity fade that has thus far limited their practical application. Through innovative operando techniques employing both soft and hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS and HAXPES) at the SISSY endstation within the BESSY II synchrotron facility, the team achieved unprecedented in-depth analysis of SSBs under real operating conditions, revealing a novel deterioration process driven by oxygen migration and reaction within the cell.
Solid-state batteries represent a pivotal leap forward in energy storage technology due to their inherent advantages, including enhanced safety profiles by elimination of flammable liquid electrolytes, and the potential for higher energy and power densities. However, intrinsic challenges persist, particularly related to the mechanical stresses induced by volumetric changes during lithium ion transport between electrodes. These volume fluctuations frequently cause structural cracks and interfacial degradation, necessitating high pressure operation to maintain effective electrode-electrolyte contact. Despite extensive efforts, the early-stage chemical and mechanical processes contributing to capacity loss remained largely elusive due to the difficulty in non-destructive, real-time monitoring of SSBs under operational pressure.
Addressing this technical impasse, Dr. Elmar Kataev and his colleagues engineered a specialized sample environment enabling operando examination of solid-state half-cells at high pressure using simultaneous dual-energy XPS and HAXPES techniques. These complementary methods permit surface-sensitive and bulk-sensitive profiling of chemical states with microscopic spatial resolution on the same sample spot, a capability uniquely available at the EMIL beamline at BESSY II. This innovation unlocked precise detection and differentiation of surface reactions and interfacial phenomena occurring within the TiS₂|Li₃YCl₆ model half-cell system, a standard archetype for SSB research.
Through meticulous operando analysis, the research team uncovered that oxygen-containing species inherently present in the battery materials undergo migration toward the cathode’s current collector during electrochemical cycling. Upon reaching this interface, these oxygen species react with the active electrode material, specifically titanium sulfide (TiS₂), giving rise to an amorphous phase enriched with titanium oxides. The accumulation of this oxide-rich interphase layer is now identified as a primary driver of the rapid capacity degradation prevalent in all-solid-state systems. This mechanistic insight contrasts with prior assumptions that capacity fade primarily results from mechanical failure and electrolyte decomposition, assigning a previously underappreciated chemical dimension to the degradation pathways.
These revelations carry profound implications for future SSB design and manufacturing. The intrinsic oxygen implicated in the degradation originates from residual oxygen contamination during material synthesis or cell assembly. Consequently, the study advocates for stringent control of oxygen ingress during the fabrication process, emphasizing inert atmosphere conditions to minimize oxygen exposure. Such preventative strategies could substantially enhance the longevity and performance stability of solid-state batteries, accelerating their commercial viability.
The experimental framework employed leveraged the unique advantages of hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to probe deeply buried interfaces shielded from conventional surface analysis, while soft X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy provided complementary characterization of surface chemistry dynamics. This synergistic approach delivered a comprehensive chemical and structural mapping during electrochemical cycling, capturing transient phenomena responsible for capacity loss. The capability to perform these operando measurements under conditions mimicking real battery operation, including high stack pressure, marks a significant advance in battery diagnostics, setting a new standard for in situ energy storage characterization.
Collaborating with Dr. Katherine Mazzio from TU Wien, the interdisciplinary team validated these findings through extensive experimental campaigns, thereby bridging the gap between fundamental surface science and practical battery engineering. The work not only elucidates the fundamental interplay of chemical species within solid electrolytes but also provides empirical evidence that can inform materials engineering for more robust cathode formulations and electrolyte compositions. Efforts to tailor interface chemistry to inhibit oxygen migration or to engineer protective interlayers could emerge as promising directions spurred by this study.
While SSBs boast transformative potential in electric vehicles, portable electronics, and grid storage due to their safety and energy density advantages, their commercial progress has been hindered by these early degradation challenges. This study shines a spotlight on the criticality of chemical purity control and offers a path toward mitigating an intrinsic failure mode that had escaped detection until now. The deployment of advanced synchrotron-based operando techniques is thus likely to become an indispensable tool in the rational design and accelerated development of next-generation energy storage devices.
Furthermore, the methodology described could be generalized to a broader class of solid-state chemistries beyond TiS₂|Li₃YCl₆, signifying a paradigm shift in operando battery research. By enabling real-time chemical state resolution under realistic conditions, identification and mitigation of elusive degradation mechanisms across various solid electrolyte systems may become attainable. This capability will underpin the translation of laboratory discoveries into commercial breakthroughs.
In summary, this pioneering research delineates a hitherto unrecognized oxygen-centric degradation pathway in all-solid-state batteries, unveiled through innovative in situ spectroscopic probes under operational conditions. The findings urge a rethink of manufacturing protocols and materials purity standards, heralding a more informed and directed approach to solid-state battery optimization. As the energy storage sector races toward safer, higher capacity solutions, the adoption of such cutting-edge analytical techniques promises to be instrumental in overcoming fundamental roadblocks hampering performance and longevity.
The study was published in ACS Energy Letters on April 21, 2026, showcasing a remarkable collaboration and technological leap that will invigorate continued research into robust and durable solid-state electrochemical systems.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Early Onset Degradation Mechanism in All Solid-State Batteries Revealed by Operando Photoelectron Spectroscopy
News Publication Date: 21-Apr-2026
Web References: 10.1021/acsenergylett.6c00551
Image Credits: E. Kataev/HZB
Keywords
Solid-state batteries, operando spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, HAXPES, battery degradation, TiS₂, Li₃YCl₆, oxygen migration, interface chemistry, high-pressure battery testing, synchrotron radiation, battery capacity fade

