Abstract
Tin foils have an impressive lithium-storage capacity more than triple that of graphite anodes, and their adoption could facilitate a drastic improvement in battery energy density. However, implementation of a dense foil electrode architecture represents a significant departure from the standard blade-cast geometry with a distinct electrochemical environment, and this has led to confusion with regards to the first cycle efficiency of the system. In this work, we investigate the unique behavior of a tin active material in a foil architecture to understand its performance as an anode. We find shallow cycling of the foil results in an irreversible formation (< 40%) due to diffusional trapping, but intermediate and complete utilization allows for a remarkably reversible formation reaction (> 90%). This striking nonlinearity stems from an in situ transformation from bulk metal to porous electrode that occurs during formation cycles and defines electrode-level lithium-transport on subsequent cycles. An alternative cycling procedure for assessing the stability of foils is proposed to account for this chemomechanical effect.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Heligman, B. T., Scanlan, K. P., & Manthiram, A. (2021). An In-Depth Analysis of the Transformation of Tin Foil Anodes during Electrochemical Cycling in Lithium-Ion Batteries. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 168(12), 120544. https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/ac42f0
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