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정경민

Jeong, Kyeong-Min
Electrochemical System Lab.
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Concurrently Achieving 10 mAh cm-2 and Ultralow Binder Content via Active-Surface- Guided Fibrillation for Fab-Scale Dry-Processed Lithium-ion Batteries

Author(s)
Park, JonggyuOh, HyeseongLim, Jong-HeonJung, SunghoonYoo, NamgyuYoo, Jung-KeunJeong, Kyeong-MinPark, Kyu-Young
Issued Date
2025-12
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/89136
Citation
Advanced Energy Materials
Abstract
Binder fibrillation-based dry electrode manufacturing is a promising strategy for producing thick electrodes for high-energy-density lithium-ion batteries. However, its roll-to-roll scalability remains limited by competing demands among process efficiency, mechanical integrity, and electrochemical performance, particularly under reduced binder content. Here, we address these challenges by investigating the fibrillation behavior of PTFE binders depending on carbon additive type. Among the tested architectures, carbon nanotube (CNT) coating significantly improves key commercial metrics—reducing kneading time by over 75%, enhancing mechanical strength, and achieving superior electrochemical performance—while also offering compatibility with roll-to-roll manufacturing. Notably, this improvement stems from a shift in the shear force transfer medium—from isolated carbon additives to the modified surface of active materials—which enables active-surface-guided fibrillation and robust binder network formation. Based on this design rule, we demonstrate fab-scale electrodes (≥100 g batch) with an areal capacity of 10 mAh cm 2 and ultralow binder content (0.3 wt%). These electrodes exhibit excellent rate capability (71.3% at 1C) and >78% capacity retention over 500 cycles in graphite full cells. Furthermore, a 1 Ah-class Li-metal pouch cell and fully dry-processed pouch cell confirms the scalability of this approach and sets a new benchmark in dry electrode processing
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
ISSN
1614-6832

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