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Hierarchical Structuring of NMC111-Cathode Materials in Lithium-Ion Batteries: An In-Depth Study on the Influence of Primary and Secondary Particle Sizes on Electrochemical Performance
- Source :
- ACS applied energy materials, 3 (12), 12565–12574, ACS applied energy materials 3(12), 12565-12574 (2020). doi:10.1021/acsaem.0c02494
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2020.
-
Abstract
- ACS applied energy materials 3(12), 12565 - 12574 (2020). doi:10.1021/acsaem.0c02494<br />Commercially used LiNi$_{1/3}$Mn$_{1/3}$Co$_{1/3}$O$_2$ (NMC111) in lithium-ion batteries mainly consists of a large-grained nonporous active material powder prepared by coprecipitation. However, nanomaterials are known to have extreme influence on gravimetric energy density and rate performance but are not used at the industrial scale because of their reactivity, low tap density, and diminished volumetric energy density. To overcome these problems, the build-up of hierarchically structured active materials and electrodes consisting of microsized secondary particles with a primary particle scale in the nanometer range is preferable. In this paper, the preparation and detailed characterization of porous hierarchically structured active materials with two different median secondary particle sizes, namely, 9 and 37 μm, and primary particle sizes in the range 300–1200 nm are presented. Electrochemical investigations by means of rate performance tests show that hierarchically structured electrodes provide higher specific capacities than conventional NMC111, and the cell performance can be tuned by adjustment of processing parameters. In particular, electrodes of coarse granules sintered at 850 °C demonstrate more favorable transport parameters because of electrode build-up, that is, the morphology of the system of active material particles in the electrode, and demonstrate superior discharge capacity. Moreover, electrodes of fine granules show an optimal electrochemical performance using NMC powders sintered at 900 °C. For a better understanding of these results, that is, of process-structure–property relationships at both granule and electrode levels, 3D imaging is performed with a subsequent statistical image analysis. Doing so, geometrical microstructure characteristics such as constrictivity quantifying the strength of bottleneck effects and descriptors for the lengths of shortest transportation paths are computed, such as the mean number of particles, which have to be passed, when going from a particle through the active material to the aluminum foil. The latter one is at lowest for coarse-grained electrodes and seems to be a crucial quantity.<br />Published by ACS Publications, Washington, DC
- Subjects :
- Technology
Materials science
Coprecipitation
Energy Engineering and Power Technology
chemistry.chemical_element
Electrochemistry
Cathode
Nanomaterials
Ion
law.invention
Chemical engineering
chemistry
law
ddc:540
Materials Chemistry
Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous)
Particle
Lithium
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Porous medium
ddc:600
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 25740962
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- ACS applied energy materials, 3 (12), 12565–12574, ACS applied energy materials 3(12), 12565-12574 (2020). doi:10.1021/acsaem.0c02494
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....367e14f10522b4881cebdad0fb7cb7ae
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000128281