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Download fileIn Situ Observation of Sodium Dendrite Growth and Concurrent Mechanical Property Measurements Using an Environmental Transmission Electron Microscopy–Atomic Force Microscopy (ETEM-AFM) Platform
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posted on 2020-07-20, 15:05 authored by Qiunan Liu, Liqiang Zhang, Haiming Sun, Lin Geng, Yanshuai Li, Yushu Tang, Peng Jia, Zaifa Wang, Qiushi Dai, Tongde Shen, Yongfu Tang, Ting Zhu, Jianyu HuangAkin
to Li, Na deposits in a dendritic form to cause a short circuit
in Na metal batteries. However, the growth mechanisms and related
mechanical properties of Na dendrites remain largely unknown. Here
we report real-time characterizations of Na dendrite growth with concurrent
mechanical property measurements using an environmental transmission
electron microscopy–atomic force microscopy (ETEM-AFM) platform. In situ electrochemical plating produces Na deposits stabilized
with a thin Na2CO3 surface layer (referred to
as Na dendrites). These Na dendrites have characteristic dimensions
of a few hundred nanometers and exhibit different morphologies, including
nanorods, polyhedral nanocrystals, and nanospheres. In situ mechanical measurements show that the compressive and tensile strengths
of Na dendrites with a Na2CO3 surface layer
vary from 36 to >203 MPa, which are much larger than those of bulk
Na. In situ growth of Na dendrites under the combined
overpotential and mechanical confinement can generate high stress
in these Na deposits. These results provide new baseline data on the
electrochemical and mechanical behavior of Na dendrites, which have
implications for the development of Na metal batteries toward practical
energy-storage applications.