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Lee, Hyun-Wook
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Stress evolution during cycling of alloy-anode solid-state batteries

Author(s)
Han, Sang YunLee, ChanheeLewis, John A.Yeh, DavidLiu, YuhgeneLee, Hyun-WookMcDowell, Matthew T.
Issued Date
2021-09
DOI
10.1016/j.joule.2021.07.002
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/54168
Fulltext
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542435121003147?via%3Dihub
Citation
JOULE, v.5, no.9, pp.2450 - 2465
Abstract
Alloy anodes hold promise for enabling high-energy solid-state batteries, but their substantial volume changes during charge/discharge can cause structural and mechanical degradation within the all-solid-state environment. It is therefore critical to understand how material evolution and mechanical stress within alloy-anode-based solid-state batteries are related. Here, we investigate stress (stack pressure) evolution within batteries with composite anodes that contain activematerials such as silicon, tin, and antimony, along with an argyrodite-type electrolyte and LiNi0.33Mn0.33Co0.33O2 cathodes. We measure megapascal-level stress changes that are dependent on the amount of lithium transferred, and we find that stress signatures and hysteresis during charge/discharge are affected by the electrode structure and the active material. We furthermore show that these composite-alloy anodes enable stable long-term cycling with associated cyclic-stress changes. These findings provide new understanding of the relationship between electrochemistry and mechanics within solid-state batteries, which is important because megapascal-level stack pressures are generally necessary for optimal performance.
Publisher
CELL PRESS
ISSN
2542-4351
Keyword
THIN-FILMSLITHIUMLIELECTROLYTESPERFORMANCELITHIATIONCHALLENGESMORPHOLOGYEXPANSIONSILICON

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