The deployment of energy dense positive electrode materials such as Ni-rich NMC (LiNi x Mn y Co z O 2 with 0 < x, y, z < 1 and x + y + z = 1) for Li-ion batteries is plagued by numerous interfacial limitations. Among them, dissolution of transition metals (TMs) was shown to trigger deleterious growth of solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) and/or lithium plating at the anode. Although numerous post-mortem analysis and cycling data showed a causal relationship between TMs deposition and capacity fading, quantifying and discriminating the major source of degradation proves tedious. Herein, using graphite/LiNiO 2 chemistry, we quantitatively demonstrate that TMs in solution permeate inside the SEI to be reduced, which precipitates cell aging following a loss of lithium inventory at the anode. This loss induces a change in intercalation staging at the graphite anode, allowing the recovery of LiNiO 2 intercalation plateau at high potential, thus leading to a “S”-shape evolution of capacity as function of cycling. Furthermore, aging study in temperature show that TMs do not favor lithium plating but rather destabilize the SEI, especially at high temperature. Beyond the sole understanding of the graphite/LiNiO 2 chemistry, this work offers practical routes towards evaluating LIBs degradations using electrochemical diagnosis methods.
CITATION STYLE
Meunier, V., De Souza, M. L., Morcrette, M., & Grimaud, A. (2022). Electrochemical Protocols to Assess the Effects of Dissolved Transition Metal in Graphite/LiNiO 2 Cells Performance. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 169(7), 070506. https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/ac7e7a
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