Thursday, August 10, 2023

Cracks in lithium-ion batteries actually speed up charging

A parking spot has a symbol for electric car charging.

Rather than being solely detrimental, cracks in the positive electrode of lithium-ion batteries actually reduce battery charge time, research shows.

The discovery runs counter to the view of many electric vehicle manufacturers, who try to minimize cracks in batteries because it decreases longevity.

“Many companies are interested in making ‘million-mile’ batteries using particles that do not crack. Unfortunately, if the cracks are removed, the battery particles won’t be able to charge quickly without the extra surface area from those cracks,” says Yiyang Li, assistant professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Michigan and corresponding author of the study published in the journal Energy and Environmental Sciences.

“On a road trip, we don’t want to wait five hours for a car to charge. We want to charge within 15 or 30 minutes.”

The researchers believe the findings apply to more than half of all electric vehicle batteries, in which the positive electrode—or cathode—is composed of trillions of microscopic particles made of either lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide or lithium nickel cobalt aluminum oxide.

Theoretically, the speed at which the cathode charges comes down to the particles’ surface-to-volume ratio. Smaller particles should charge faster than larger particles because they have a higher surface area relative to volume, so the lithium ions have shorter distances to diffuse through them.

However, conventional methods couldn’t directly measure the charging properties of individual cathode particles, only the average for all the particles that make up the battery’s cathode. That limitation means the widely accepted relationship between charging speed and cathode particle size was merely an assumption.

“We find that the cathode particles are cracked and have more active surfaces to take in lithium ions—not just on their outer surface, but inside the particle cracks,” says Jinhong Min, a doctoral student in materials science and engineering working in Li’s lab. “Battery scientists know that the cracking occurs but have not measured how such cracking affects the charging speed.”

Measuring the charging speed of individual cathode particles was key to discovering the upside to cracking cathodes. To accomplish this, Li and Min inserted the particles into a device that neuroscientists typically use to study how individual brain cells transmit electrical signals.

“Back when I was in graduate school, a colleague studying neuroscience showed me these arrays that they used to study individual neurons. I wondered if we can also use them to study battery particles, which are similar in size to neurons,” Li says.

Each array is a custom-designed, 2-by-2 centimeter chip with up to 100 microelectrodes. After scattering some cathode particles in the center of the chip, Min moved single particles onto their own electrodes on the array using a needle around 70 times thinner than a human hair. Once the particles were in place, Min could simultaneously charge and discharge up to four individual particles at a time on the array and measured 21 particles in this particular study.

The experiment revealed that the cathode particles’ charging speeds did not depend on their size. Li and Min think that the most likely explanation for this unexpected behavior is that larger particles actually behave like a collection of smaller particles when they crack.

Another possibility is that the lithium ions move very quickly in the grain boundaries—the tiny spaces between the nanoscale crystals comprising the cathode particle. Li thinks this is unlikely unless the battery’s electrolyte—the liquid medium in which the lithium ions move—penetrates these boundaries, forming cracks.

The benefits of cracked materials are important to consider when designing long-lived batteries with single-crystal particles that don’t crack. To charge quickly, these particles may need to be smaller than today’s cracking cathode particles.

The alternative is to make single-crystal cathodes with different materials that can move lithium faster, but those materials could be limited by the supply of necessary metals or have lower energy densities, Li says.

The device was built in the Lurie Nanofabrication Facility and studied at the Michigan Center for Materials Characterization.

LG Energy Solution, Battery Innovation Contest, and the University of Michigan College of Engineering funded the work.

Source: Derek Smith for University of Michigan

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