Title: Studies on Capacity Fade of Spinel based Li-Ion Batteries
1Studies on Capacity Fade of Spinel based Li-Ion
Batteries
- by
- P. Ramadass , A. Durairajan, Bala S. Haran, R.
E. White and B. N. Popov - Center for Electrochemical Engineering
- Department of Chemical Engineering, University of
South Carolina Columbia, SC 29208
2Motivation
- To characterize the capacity fade phenomena of
Li-ion batteries. - To decrease the capacity fade on both positive
and negative electrode by optimizing the DC and
pulse charging protocol. - To develop mathematical model which will explain
the capacity fade in the spinel system.
3Objectives
- To study the change in capacity of commercially
available spinel based Li-ion Cells (Cellbatt?
cells). - Study the performance of Li-ion cells under DC
charging at different rates. - Use impedance spectroscopy to analyze the change
in cathode and anode resistance with cycling. - Determine experimentally which electrode is more
important in contributing to capacity fade. - Do material characterization to study changes in
electrode structure with cycling.
4Capacity Fade may Result from
- Overcharge Phenomena
- Lithium deposition on negative electrodes
- Electrolyte oxidation on positive electrode
- Passivation (Interfacial film formation)
- Self discharge
- Electrolyte Reduction
- Active Material Dissolution
- Phase Change
5Physical Characteristics of Cellbatt? Lithium Ion
Battery Electrodes
Cellbatt? is a Prismatic type cell
6Electrode Reactions
At anode
At cathode
Non-Stoichiometric Spinel
Cell Reaction
7Charging Protocols
- Constant current - Constant voltage
- Total charging time fixed
- Constant voltage
- Charging done completely at constant voltage
- Constant current - Constant voltage
- Charging stopped when the current reaches a value
of 50 mA during the CV part - Charging done to different cut-off potentials
8Change in discharge capacity for Li-ion cells
charged to different potentials
9Experimental
- Full Cell studies on CellBatt Li-ion Cells
- Galvanostatic charge-discharge
- 0.25 A, 0.5 A, 0.75 A, 1 A - (3.0-4.17 V)
- Cyclic Voltammograms - 0.05 mV/s, 2.5-4.2 V
- T-cell (half cell) studies
- Glove Box - Disk electrodes 1.2 cm ?
- Counter, Reference electrodes Li metal
- Cyclic Voltammograms - 0.05, 0.1 and 0.2 mV/s,
3-4.5 V vs. Li/Li for spinel and 0-1.2V vs.
Li/Li for carbon - Impedance Analysis - 100 kHz 1 mHz 5 mV.
- XRD studies of spinel electrode at various
cycles.
10Charge curves for CC-CV Protocol
11Charge and Discharge curves for Li-ion Cell at
various Cycles
C/2 Rate
Capacity Fade 15.4 for C/2 rate
Capacity Fade 19 for 1 C rate
C/2 Rate
12Change in CC-CV Profiles with Cycling
13Nyquist plots for Cellbatt? cell charged at 0.5 A
at different states of charge
14Nyquist plots for Cellbatt? cell charged at 0.5 A
during different cycles
15Nyquist Plots for Spinel and Carbon Electrodes at
Discharged state at Various Cycles
Spinel
Carbon
16Cyclic Voltammograms of Spinel Electrode after
800 Cycles at various Scan rates
17Cyclic Voltammograms of Carbon Electrode after
800 Cycles at various Scan rates
18Cyclic Voltammograms of Spinel and Carbon
Electrodes at Different Cycles
Spinel
Carbon
19XRD Patterns of Spinel after Different
Charge-Discharge Cycles
P. G.. Bruce et al., J. Electrochem. Soc., 146,
3649 (1999).
20Conclusions
- Varying the charging rate affects the overall
capacity of the cell. - Impedance studies reveal no significant increase
in resistance at both electrodes after 800
cycles. - XRD studies of Spinel electrode reveal the
formation of an additional phase with cycling. - Capacity fade in the case of Cellbatt? cells can
be summarized as
21Capacity Fade in Cellbatt? Li-ion cells
Secondary Active Material Degradation(C6
LiMn2O4)
Structural Degradation of LiMn2O4
Mn Dissolution from Spinel
SEI layer attack on Negative Electrode
HF formation
Accumulation of ?-MnO2 with Cycling
E. Wang et al.
J.C.Hunter et al.
Electrolyte Oxidation (starts from 3.7 V)
Salt Hydrolysis
22Acknowledgements
Financial support provided in part by the
Department of Energy (DOE) is gratefully
acknowledged.
Thank you!