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Live from inside a battery

09.03.14 | Technical University of Munich (TUM)

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Mobile phones, digital cameras, camcorders, notebooks: They all run on lithium-ion batteries. These are characterized by high energy densities while remaining small and light enough to be used in portable devices. "A lithium-ion battery can store three to four times the energy of a comparably sized nickel-cadmium battery," explains Dr. habil. Ralph Gilles, scientist at the Neutron Source Heinz Maier-Leibnitz (FRM II). Even temperature fluctuations and longer-term storage do not pose problems for lithium-ion batteries.

These advantages make lithium-ion batteries a key technology for electromobility. In the not too distant future, electric vehicles will be able to hold their own against liquid fuel-driven transport media – also with regard to the accessible distance. This will require powerful, safe and fast-charging batteries.

Lithium Plating Can Cause Short-circuits

However, one previously known, yet poorly understood phenomenon stands in the way of this goal: metallic lithium deposition or lithium plating, as it is called.

Simply put, energy storage in a lithium-ion battery works by the following principle: Both the positive electrode (cathode) and the negative electrode (anode) can bind lithium ions. During the charging process, the induced electrical field forces the ions to move from the cathode to the anode. When the battery is discharged, the lithium ions move back to the cathode, releasing energy in the process.

The cathode in lithium-ion batteries comprises a lithium metal oxide while the standard material for battery anodes is graphite (carbon) with a layered structure. During the charging process, the lithium ions are stored in these layers.

However, occasionally lithium ions form metallic lithium instead of intercalating into the anode, as desired. The lithium deposits onto the anode and is no longer fully available for the described process. The result is a drop in battery performance. In extreme cases this can even lead to short-circuits. In addition, metallic lithium is highly inflammable.

Non-destructive Investigation Using Neutrons as a Probe

Hitherto, observing the precise mechanism at work during lithium plating has not been possible. When a battery is opened, explains Ralph Gilles, you only get a snapshot of its present state. Yet, the amount of metallic lithium changes permanently. Using neutron beams, the scientists Dr. Veronika Zinth at the Neutron Source Heinz Maier-Leibnitz (FRM II) and Christian von Lüders at the Department of Electrical Energy Storage Technology were able to observe the processes inside of batteries without cutting them open.

"In contrast to other methods, with neutron diffraction we can make more precise statements about when and how strongly lithium plating takes place," explains Veronika Zinth.

Using the material research diffractometer STRESS-SPEC at FRM II, the researchers installed a battery, in both charging and discharging states, into the neutron beam. The incident neutron beam is diffracted according to Bragg's law and collected in a detector. Using these signals, the researchers were able to indirectly deduce how much metallic lithium had formed.

Faster Charging Means More Metallic Lithium

Initial results of the study:

The scientists are planning further experiments to shed more light on the lithium plating mechanism. The results may help answer the question of how the phenomenon might be averted altogether. This will also involve answering the question of how quickly batteries can be charged before lithium plating sets in.

The study is part of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) ExZellTUM (Exellence Center for Battery Cells) project. The ExZellTUM project is geared towards the development of new energy storage systems, as well as new manufacturing processes, forming strategies and test technologies for storage systems production. The project comprises four partners: the Department of Electrical Energy Storage Systems, the Department of Machine Tools and Industrial Management, the Department of Technical Electrochemistry and the Neutron Source Heinz Maier-Leibnitz.

Publication

Lithium plating in lithium-ion batteries at sub-ambient temperatures investigated by in situ neutron diffraction, Veronika Zinth, Christian von Lüders, Michael Hofmann, Johannes Hattendorff, Irmgard Buchberger, Simon Erhard, Joana Rebelo-Kornmeier, Andreas Jossen, Ralph Gilles, Journal of Power Sources , Doi: 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2014.07.168

Contact

Dr. Ralph Gilles
Technische Universität München
Neutron Source Heinz Maier-Leibnitz (FRM II)
Tel: +49 89-289-14665
ralph.gilles@frm2.tum.de

http://www.frm2.tum.de

Journal of Power Sources

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Stefanie Reiffert
reiffert@zv.tum.de

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Technical University of Munich (TUM). (2014, September 3). Live from inside a battery. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/14GZ0JGL/live-from-inside-a-battery.html
MLA:
"Live from inside a battery." Brightsurf News, Sep. 3 2014, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/14GZ0JGL/live-from-inside-a-battery.html.