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Intercalation Pathway in Many-Particle LiFePO<sub>4</sub> Electrode Revealed by Nanoscale State-of-Charge Mapping
220
Citations
36
References
2013
Year
Lithium Iron PhosphateEngineeringElectrode-electrolyte InterfaceChemistryIntercalation PathwayNanoscale State-of-charge MappingChemical EngineeringLfp ElectrodesElectrochemical InterfaceElectrode Reaction MechanismBiophysicsBattery Electrode MaterialsLithium-ion BatteryLithium-ion BatteriesEnergy StorageSolid-state BatteryElectrochemistryLi-ion Battery MaterialsFundamental ElectrochemistryCathode MaterialsElectrochemical Energy StorageBatteries
The intercalation pathway of lithium iron phosphate (LFP) in the positive electrode of a lithium-ion battery was probed at the ∼40 nm length scale using oxidation-state-sensitive X-ray microscopy. Combined with morphological observations of the same exact locations using transmission electron microscopy, we quantified the local state-of-charge of approximately 450 individual LFP particles over nearly the entire thickness of the porous electrode. With the electrode charged to 50% state-of-charge in 0.5 h, we observed that the overwhelming majority of particles were either almost completely delithiated or lithiated. Specifically, only ∼2% of individual particles were at an intermediate state-of-charge. From this small fraction of particles that were actively undergoing delithiation, we conclude that the time needed to charge a particle is ∼1/50 the time needed to charge the entire particle ensemble. Surprisingly, we observed a very weak correlation between the sequence of delithiation and the particle size, contrary to the common expectation that smaller particles delithiate before larger ones. Our quantitative results unambiguously confirm the mosaic (particle-by-particle) pathway of intercalation and suggest that the rate-limiting process of charging is initiating the phase transformation by, for example, a nucleation-like event. Therefore, strategies for further enhancing the performance of LFP electrodes should not focus on increasing the phase-boundary velocity but on the rate of phase-transformation initiation.
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