TY - JOUR KW - Nickel oxide KW - Conversion reaction KW - In situ TEM KW - Incubation KW - Lithium-ion battery KW - Rate capability AU - K He AU - Huolin L Xin AU - K Zhao AU - X Yu AU - Dennis Nordlund AU - Tsu-Chien Weng AU - J Li AU - Y Jiang AU - C A Cadigan AU - R M Richards AU - Marca M Doeff AU - Xiao-Qing Yang AU - E A Stach AU - J Li AU - Feng Lin AU - D Su AB -
Nanoparticle electrodes in lithium-ion batteries have both near-surface and interior contributions to their redox capacity, each with distinct rate capabilities. Using combined electron microscopy, synchrotron X-ray methods and ab initio calculations, we have investigated the lithiation pathways that occur in NiO electrodes. We find that the near-surface electroactive (Ni(2+) --> Ni(0)) sites saturated very quickly, and then encounter unexpected difficulty in propagating the phase transition into the electrode (referred to as a "shrinking-core" mode). However, the interior capacity for Ni(2+) --> Ni(0) can be accessed efficiently following the nucleation of lithiation "fingers" that propagate into the sample bulk, but only after a certain incubation time. Our microstructural observations of the transition from a slow shrinking-core mode to a faster lithiation finger mode corroborate with synchrotron characterization of large-format batteries and can be rationalized by stress effects on transport at high-rate discharge. The finite incubation time of the lithiation fingers sets the intrinsic limitation for the rate capability (and thus the power) of NiO for electrochemical energy storage devices. The present work unravels the link between the nanoscale reaction pathways and the C-rate-dependent capacity loss and provides guidance for the further design of battery materials that favors high C-rate charging.
AD -Center for Functional Nanomaterials, Brookhaven National Laboratory , Upton, New York 11973, United States.
AN - 25633328 BT - Nano Lett DA - 02/2015 DO - 10.1021/nl5049884 ET - 2015/01/31 J2 - Nano letters LA - eng M1 - 2 N2 -Nanoparticle electrodes in lithium-ion batteries have both near-surface and interior contributions to their redox capacity, each with distinct rate capabilities. Using combined electron microscopy, synchrotron X-ray methods and ab initio calculations, we have investigated the lithiation pathways that occur in NiO electrodes. We find that the near-surface electroactive (Ni(2+) --> Ni(0)) sites saturated very quickly, and then encounter unexpected difficulty in propagating the phase transition into the electrode (referred to as a "shrinking-core" mode). However, the interior capacity for Ni(2+) --> Ni(0) can be accessed efficiently following the nucleation of lithiation "fingers" that propagate into the sample bulk, but only after a certain incubation time. Our microstructural observations of the transition from a slow shrinking-core mode to a faster lithiation finger mode corroborate with synchrotron characterization of large-format batteries and can be rationalized by stress effects on transport at high-rate discharge. The finite incubation time of the lithiation fingers sets the intrinsic limitation for the rate capability (and thus the power) of NiO for electrochemical energy storage devices. The present work unravels the link between the nanoscale reaction pathways and the C-rate-dependent capacity loss and provides guidance for the further design of battery materials that favors high C-rate charging.
PY - 2015 SN - 1530-6992 (Electronic)1530-6984 (Linking) SP - 1437 EP - 44 T2 - Nano Lett TI - Transitions from Near-Surface to Interior Redox upon Lithiation in Conversion Electrode Materials VL - 15 ER -