posted on 2024-04-08, 14:33authored byJeong
Seop Yoon, Daniel W. Liao, Samuel M. Greene, Tae H. Cho, Neil P. Dasgupta, Donald J. Siegel
A rechargeable battery that employs a Li metal anode
requires that
Li be plated in a uniform fashion during charging. In “anode-free”
configurations, this plating will occur on the surface of the Cu current
collector (CC) during the initial cycle and in any subsequent cycle
where the capacity of the cell is fully accessed. Experimental measurements
have shown that the plating of Li on Cu can be inhomogeneous, which
can lower the efficiency of plating and foster the formation of Li
dendrites. The present study employs a combination of first-principles
calculations and sessile drop experiments to characterize the thermodynamics
and adhesive (i.e., wetting) properties of interfaces
involving Li and other phases present on or near the CC. Interfaces
between Li and Cu, Cu2O, and Li2O are considered.
The calculations predict that both Cu and Cu2O surfaces
are lithiophilic. However, sessile drop measurements reveal that Li
wetting occurs readily only on pristine Cu. This apparent discrepancy
is explained by the occurrence of a spontaneous conversion reaction,
2 Li + Cu2O → Li2O + 2 Cu, that generates
Li2O as one of its products. Calculations and sessile drop
measurements show that Li does not wet (newly formed) Li2O. Hence, Li that is deposited on a Cu CC where surface oxide species
are present will encounter a compositionally heterogeneous substrate
comprising lithiophillic (Cu) and lithiophobic (Li2O) regions.
These initial heterogeneities have the potential to influence the
longer-term behavior of the anode under cycling. In sum, the present
study provides insights into the early stage processes associated
with Li plating in anode-free batteries and describes mechanisms that
contribute to inefficiencies in their operation.