Nanoscale Nucleation and Growth of Electrodeposited Lithium Metal

被引:1438
作者
Pei, Allen [1 ]
Zheng, Guangyuan [1 ]
Shi, Feifei [1 ]
Li, Yuzhang [1 ]
Cui, Yi [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Dept Mat Sci & Engn, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] SLAC Natl Accelerator Lab, Stanford Inst Mat & Energy Sci, 2575 Sand Hill Rd, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA
关键词
Lithium metal anode; electrodeposition; nucleation and growth; anode-less; anode-free; copper; ATOMIC LAYER DEPOSITION; RECHARGEABLE BATTERIES; MICROSTRUCTURAL LITHIUM; DENDRITE GROWTH; CURRENT-DENSITY; ENERGY-STORAGE; LI-7; MRI; ELECTROLYTES; ANODES; LIQUID;
D O I
10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04755
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Lithium metal has re-emerged as an exciting anode for high energy lithium-ion batteries due to its high specific capacity of 3860 mAh g(-1) and lowest electrochemical potential of all known materials. However, lithium has been plagued by the issues of dendrite formation, high chemical reactivity with electrolyte, and infinite relative volume expansion during plating and stripping, which present safety hazards and low cycling efficiency in batteries with lithium metal electrodes. There have been a lot of recent studies on Li metal although little work has focused on the initial nucleation and growth behavior of Li metal, neglecting a critical fundamental scientific foundation of Li plating. Here, we study experimentally the morphology of lithium in the early stages of nucleation and growth on planar copper electrodes in liquid organic electrolyte. We elucidate the dependence of lithium nuclei size, shape, and areal density on current rate, consistent with classical nucleation and growth theory. We found that the nuclei size is proportional to the inverse of overpotential and the number density of nuclei is proportional to the cubic power of overpotential. Based on this understanding, we propose a strategy to increase the uniformity of electrodeposited lithium on the electrode surface.
引用
收藏
页码:1132 / 1139
页数:8
相关论文
共 55 条
[1]   Building better batteries [J].
Armand, M. ;
Tarascon, J. -M. .
NATURE, 2008, 451 (7179) :652-657
[2]   Attempts to improve the behavior of Li electrodes in rechargeable lithium batteries [J].
Aurbach, D ;
Zinigrad, E ;
Teller, H ;
Cohen, Y ;
Salitra, G ;
Yamin, H ;
Dan, P ;
Elster, E .
JOURNAL OF THE ELECTROCHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2002, 149 (10) :A1267-A1277
[3]  
Aurbach D, 2003, ELECTROCHIM ACTA, V48, P599
[4]   On the Surface Chemical Aspects of Very High Energy Density, Rechargeable Li-Sulfur Batteries [J].
Aurbach, Doron ;
Pollak, Elad ;
Elazari, Ran ;
Salitra, Gregory ;
Kelley, C. Scordilis ;
Affinito, John .
JOURNAL OF THE ELECTROCHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2009, 156 (08) :A694-A702
[5]  
Bhattacharyya R, 2010, NAT MATER, V9, P504, DOI [10.1038/nmat2764, 10.1038/NMAT2764]
[6]  
Bruce PG, 2012, NAT MATER, V11, P19, DOI [10.1038/nmat3191, 10.1038/NMAT3191]
[7]  
Chandrashekar S, 2012, NAT MATER, V11, P311, DOI [10.1038/NMAT3246, 10.1038/nmat3246]
[8]   Correlating Microstructural Lithium Metal Growth with Electrolyte Salt Depletion in Lithium Batteries Using 7Li MRI [J].
Chang, Hee Jung ;
Ilott, Andrew J. ;
Trease, Nicole M. ;
Mohammadi, Mohaddese ;
Jerschow, Alexej ;
Grey, Clare P. .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2015, 137 (48) :15209-15216
[9]   In situ micro-FTIR study of the solid-solid interface between lithium electrode and polymer electrolytes [J].
Cheng, H. ;
Zhu, C. B. ;
Lu, M. ;
Yang, Y. .
JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES, 2007, 174 (02) :1027-1031
[10]   A Review of Solid Electrolyte Interphases on Lithium Metal Anode [J].
Cheng, Xin-Bing ;
Zhang, Rui ;
Zhao, Chen-Zi ;
Wei, Fei ;
Zhang, Ji-Guang ;
Zhang, Qiang .
ADVANCED SCIENCE, 2016, 3 (03)