posted on 2021-08-31, 19:38authored byAbhishek Sarkar, Pranav Shrotriya, Ikenna C. Nlebedim
Interfacial anodic degradation in
graphitic materials under fast
charging conditions causes severe performance loss and safety hazard
in lithium ion batteries. We present a novel method for minimizing
the growth of these aging mechanism by application of an external
magnetic field. Under magnetic field, paramagnetic lithium ions experience
a magnetohydrodynamic force, which rotates the perpendicularly diffusing
species and homogenizes the ionic transport. This phenomenon minimizes
the overpotential hotspots at the anode/separator interface, consequently
reducing SEI growth, lithium plating, and interfacial fracture. In
situ electrochemical measurements indicate an improvement in capacity
for lithium cobalt oxide/graphite pouch cell (20 mAh) charged from
1–5 C under an applied field of 1.8 kG, with a maximum capacity
gain of 22% at 5C. Post-mortem FE-SEM and EDS mapping shows that samples
charged with magnetic field have a reduced lithium deposition at 3C
and a complete suppression of interfacial fracture at 5C. At 5C, a
24% reduction in the lithium content is observed by performing XPS
on the anodic interfacial film. Finally, fast charging performance
under variable magnetic field strengths indicate a saturation behavior
in capacity at high fields (>2 kG), thereby limiting the field
and
consequent energy requirements to obtain maximum capacity gain under
extreme conditions.