LiCoO2 electrodes contain three phases, or domains, each having specific‐intended functions: ion‐conducting pore space, lithium‐ion‐reacting active material, and electron conducting carbon‐binder domain (CBD). Transport processes take place in all domains on different characteristic length scales: from the micrometer scale in the active material grains through to the nanopores in the carbon‐binder phase. Consequently, more than one imaging approach must be utilized to obtain a hierarchical geometric representation of the electrode. An approach incorporating information from the micro‐ and nanoscale to calculate 3D transport‐relevant properties in a large‐reconstructed active domain is presented. Advantages of focused ion beam/scanning electron microscopy imaging and X‐ray tomography combined by a spatial stochastic model, validated with an artificially produced reference structure are used. This novel approach leads to significantly different transport relevant properties compared with previous tomographic approaches: nanoporosity of the CBD leads to up to 42% additional contact area between active material and pore space and increases ionic conduction by a factor of up to 3.6. The results show that nanoporosity within the CBD cannot be neglected.
Innovative approach for producing GDLs of PEM electrolyzers enabling a significant reduction in the manufacturing cost and facilitating higher performance than from the state of the art.
X‐ray tomography allows the active‐material domain (LiCoO2) of Li‐ion battery cathodes to be imaged, but it is unable to resolve the carbon‐binder domain (CBD). Here, a new method for creating a complete 3D representation (virtual design) of all three phases of a cathode is provided; this includes the active‐material domain, the CBD, and the electrolyte‐filled pore space. It combines X‐ray tomographic data of active material with a statistically modeled CBD. Two different statistical CBD morphology models are compared as examples: i) a random cluster model representing a standard mixture of carbon black and polyvenylidene fluoride (PVDF) and ii) a fiber model. The transport parameters are compared in a charged and a discharged cathode. The results demonstrate that the CBD content and morphology changes the ionic and electronic transport parameters dramatically and thus cannot be neglected. Calculations yield that the fiber model shows up to three times higher electrical conductivity at the same CBD content (discharged case) and better ionic diffusion conditions for all CBD contents. In the charged case, the morphology impact on electrical conduction is small. This effective method to generate transport parameters for different CBDs can be transferred to other CBD morphologies and electrodes.
Due to its low redox potential and high theoretical specific capacity, Li metal has drawn worldwide research attention because of its potential use in next-generation battery technologies such as Li-S and Li-O2. Unfortunately, uncontrollable growth of Li microstructures (LmSs, e.g., dendrites, fibers) during electrochemical Li stripping/plating has prevented their practical commercialization. Despite various strategies proposed to mitigate LmS nucleation and/or block its growth, a fundamental understanding of the underlying evolution mechanisms remains elusive. Herein, synchrotron in-line phase contrast X-ray tomography was employed to investigate the morphological evolution of electrochemically deposited/dissolved LmSs nondestructively. We present a 3D characterization of electrochemically stripped Li electrodes with regard to electrochemically plated LmSs. We clarify fundamentally the origin of the porous lithium interface growing into Li electrodes. Moreover, cleavage of the separator caused by growing LmS was experimentally observed and visualized in 3D. Our systematic investigation provides fundamental insights into LmS evolution and enables us to understand the evolution mechanisms in Li electrodes more profoundly.
We report the structural and electronic properties of an artificial graphene/Ni (111) (111), and mildly corrugated graphene on Ir(111), allows to disentangle the two key properties which lead to the observed increased interaction, namely lattice matching and electronic interaction. Although the latter determines the strength of the hybridization, we find an important influence of the local carbon configuration resulting from the lattice mismatch.
Addressing the multitude of electronic phenomena theoretically predicted for confined graphene structures requires appropriate in situ fabrication procedures yielding graphene nanoflakes (GNFs) with well-defined geometries and accessible electronic properties. Here, we present a simple strategy to fabricate quasi-free-standing GNFs of variable sizes, performing temperature programmed growth of graphene flakes on the Ir(111) surface and subsequent intercalation of gold. Using scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), we show that epitaxial GNFs on a perfectly ordered Au(111) surface are formed while maintaining an unreconstructed, singly hydrogen-terminated edge structure, as confirmed by the accompanying density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Using tip-induced lateral displacement of GNFs, we demonstrate that GNFs on Au(111) are to a large extent decoupled from the Au(111) substrate. The direct accessibility of the electronic states of a single GNF is demonstrated upon analysis of the quasiparticle interference patterns obtained by low-temperature STM. These findings open up an interesting playground for diverse investigations of graphene nanostructures with possible implications for device fabrication.
Lithium/sulphur batteries are promising candidates for future energy storage systems, mainly due to their high potential capacity. However low sulphur utilization and capacity fading hinder practical realizations. In order to improve understanding of the system, we investigate Li/S electrode morphology changes for different ageing steps, using X-ray phase contrast tomography. Thereby we find a strong decrease of sulphur loading after the first cycle, and a constant loading of about 15% of the initial loading afterwards. While cycling, the mean sulphur particle diameters decrease in a qualitatively similar fashion as the discharge capacity fades. The particles spread, migrate into the current collector and accumulate in the upper part again. Simultaneously sulphur particles lose contact area with the conducting network but regain it after ten cycles because their decreasing size results in higher surface areas. Since the capacity still decreases, this regain could be associated with effects such as surface area passivation and increasing charge transfer resistance.
Knowledge about degradation and failure of Li-ion batteries (LIBs) is of paramount importance especially because failure can be accompanied by severe hazards. To contribute to the understanding of such phenomena synchrotron in-line phase contrast Xray tomography was employed to investigate internal cell deformation and degradation caused by an internal short circuit (ISC). The tomographic images taken from an uncycled Li/Li cell and a short-circuited Li/Li cell reveal how lithium microstructures (LmS) develop during electrochemical stripping and plating during discharge and charge and how the three-layer separator used is damaged by growing LmSs and delaminates and melts as a consequence of an ISC. Previously unknown insights into the internal cell degradation and deformation mechanisms caused by an ISC are obtained and provide hints of how the properties of the separator could be modified in order to improve the reliability and safety of current and next-generation LIBs.
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