Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries

Lithium alloys with metallic or semi-metallic elements are attractive candidate materials for the next-generation rechargeable Li-ion battery anodes, thanks to their large specific and volumetric capacities. The key challenge, however, has been the large volume changes, and the associated stress bui...

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Main Author: Gao, Yifan
Other Authors: Zhou, Min
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/49027
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-490272016-06-09T03:33:13ZChemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteriesGao, YifanLi-ion batteryElectrode materialsMechanical reliabilityContinuum modelsDiffusionStressPlasticityFractureLithium ion batteriesElectrodesStorage batteriesLithium alloys with metallic or semi-metallic elements are attractive candidate materials for the next-generation rechargeable Li-ion battery anodes, thanks to their large specific and volumetric capacities. The key challenge, however, has been the large volume changes, and the associated stress buildup and failure during cycling. The chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials entail interactions among diffusion, chemical reactions, plastic flow, and material property evolutions. In this study, a continuum theory of two-way coupling between diffusion and deformation is formulated and numerically implemented. Analyses based on this framework reveal three major conclusions. First, the stress-to-diffusion coupling in Li/Si is much stronger than what has been known in other electrode materials. Practically, since the beneficial effect of stress-enhanced diffusion is more pronounced at intermediate or higher concentrations, lower charging rates should be used during the initial stages of charging. Second, when plastic deformation and lithiation-induced softening take place, the effect of stress-enhanced diffusion is neutralized. Because the mechanical driving forces tend to retard diffusion when constraints are strong, even in terms of operational charging rate alone, Li/Si nano-particles are superior to Li/Si thin films or bulk materials. Third, the diffusion of the host atoms can lead to significant stress relaxation even when the stress levels are below the yield threshold of the material, a beneficial effect that can be leveraged to reduce stresses because the host diffusivity in Li/Si can be non-negligible at higher Li concentrations. A theory of coupled chemo-mechanical fracture driving forces is formulated in order to capture the effect of deformation-diffusion coupling and lithiation-induced softening on fracture. It is shown that under tensile loading, Li accumulates in front of crack tips, leading to an anti-shielding effect on the energy release rate. For a pre-cracked Li/Si thin-film electrode, it is found that the driving force for fracture is significantly lower when the electrode is operated at higher Li concentrations -- a result of more effective stress relaxation via global yielding. The results indicate that operation at higher concentrations is an effective means to minimize failure of thin-film Li/Si alloy electrodes.Georgia Institute of TechnologyZhou, Min2013-09-20T13:24:42Z2013-09-20T13:24:42Z2013-082013-05-17August 20132013-09-20T13:24:42ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/49027en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Li-ion battery
Electrode materials
Mechanical reliability
Continuum models
Diffusion
Stress
Plasticity
Fracture
Lithium ion batteries
Electrodes
Storage batteries
spellingShingle Li-ion battery
Electrode materials
Mechanical reliability
Continuum models
Diffusion
Stress
Plasticity
Fracture
Lithium ion batteries
Electrodes
Storage batteries
Gao, Yifan
Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries
description Lithium alloys with metallic or semi-metallic elements are attractive candidate materials for the next-generation rechargeable Li-ion battery anodes, thanks to their large specific and volumetric capacities. The key challenge, however, has been the large volume changes, and the associated stress buildup and failure during cycling. The chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials entail interactions among diffusion, chemical reactions, plastic flow, and material property evolutions. In this study, a continuum theory of two-way coupling between diffusion and deformation is formulated and numerically implemented. Analyses based on this framework reveal three major conclusions. First, the stress-to-diffusion coupling in Li/Si is much stronger than what has been known in other electrode materials. Practically, since the beneficial effect of stress-enhanced diffusion is more pronounced at intermediate or higher concentrations, lower charging rates should be used during the initial stages of charging. Second, when plastic deformation and lithiation-induced softening take place, the effect of stress-enhanced diffusion is neutralized. Because the mechanical driving forces tend to retard diffusion when constraints are strong, even in terms of operational charging rate alone, Li/Si nano-particles are superior to Li/Si thin films or bulk materials. Third, the diffusion of the host atoms can lead to significant stress relaxation even when the stress levels are below the yield threshold of the material, a beneficial effect that can be leveraged to reduce stresses because the host diffusivity in Li/Si can be non-negligible at higher Li concentrations. A theory of coupled chemo-mechanical fracture driving forces is formulated in order to capture the effect of deformation-diffusion coupling and lithiation-induced softening on fracture. It is shown that under tensile loading, Li accumulates in front of crack tips, leading to an anti-shielding effect on the energy release rate. For a pre-cracked Li/Si thin-film electrode, it is found that the driving force for fracture is significantly lower when the electrode is operated at higher Li concentrations -- a result of more effective stress relaxation via global yielding. The results indicate that operation at higher concentrations is an effective means to minimize failure of thin-film Li/Si alloy electrodes.
author2 Zhou, Min
author_facet Zhou, Min
Gao, Yifan
author Gao, Yifan
author_sort Gao, Yifan
title Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries
title_short Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries
title_full Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries
title_fullStr Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries
title_full_unstemmed Chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for Li-ion batteries
title_sort chemo-mechanics of alloy-based electrode materials for li-ion batteries
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/49027
work_keys_str_mv AT gaoyifan chemomechanicsofalloybasedelectrodematerialsforliionbatteries
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