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On Leakage Current Measured at High Cell Voltages in Lithium-Ion Batteries
61
Citations
34
References
2017
Year
Materials ScienceElectric BatteryElectrical EngineeringLeakage Current MeasuredEngineeringHigh Cell VoltagesSide ReactionLithium-ion BatteryLithium-ion BatteriesEnergy StorageParasitic Side ReactionElectrochemical Energy StorageElectrophysiologyBatteriesChemistrySolid-state BatteryAqueous BatteryElectrochemistry
In this study, parasitic side reactions in lithium-ion batteries were examined experimentally using a potentiostatic hold at high cell voltage. The experimental leakage current measured during the potentiostatic hold was compared to the Tafel expression and showed poor agreement with the expected transfer coefficient values, indicating that a more complicated expression could be needed to accurately capture the physics of this side reaction. Here we show that cross-talk between the electrodes is the primary contribution to the observed leakage current after the relaxation of concentration gradients has ceased. This cross-talk was confirmed with experiments using a lithium-ion conducting glass ceramic (LICGC) separator, which has high conductance only for lithium cations. The cells with LICGC separators showed significantly less leakage current during the potentiostatic hold test compared to cells with standard microporous separators where cross-talk is present. In addition, direct-current pulse power tests show an impedance rise for cells held at high potentials and for cells held at high temperatures, which could be attributed to film formation from the parasitic side reaction. Based on the experimental findings, a phenomenological mechanism is proposed for the parasitic side reaction which accounts for cross-talk and mass transport of the decomposition products across the separator.
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