Avtar Singh , Jihun Song , Wei Li , Trevor Martin , Hongyi Xu , Donal P. Finegan , Juner Zhu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Lithium-nickel-manganese-cobalt-oxides (NMC) embedded in solid-electrolytes are being extensively applied as composite cathodes to match the high energy density of metallic anodes. During charge/discharge, the cathode composite often degrades through the evolution of micro-cracks within the grains, along the grain boundaries, and delamination at the particle-electrolyte interface. Experimental evidence has shown that regulating the morphology of grains and their crystallographic orientations is an effective way to relieve the volume-expansion-induced stresses and cracks, consequently stabilizing the electrochemical performance of the electrode. However, the interplay among the crystal orientation, grain morphology, and chemo-mechanical behavior has not been holistically studied. In that context, a thermodynamically consistent computational framework is developed to understand the role of microstructural modulation on the chemo-mechanical interactions of a polycrystalline NMC secondary particle embedded in a sulfide-based solid electrolyte. A phase-field fracture variable is employed to consider the initiation and propagation of cracks. A set of diffused phase-field parameters is adopted to define the transition of chemo-mechanical properties between the grains, grain boundaries, electrolyte, and particle-electrolyte interfaces. This modeling framework is implemented in the open-source finite element package MOOSE to solve three state variables: concentration, displacement, and phase-field damage parameter. A systematic parametric study is performed to explore the effects of aspect ratio, the crystal orientation of grains, and the interfacial fracture energy through the chemo-mechanical analysis of the composite electrode. The findings of this study offer predictive insights for designing solid-state batteries that provide stable performance with reduced fracture evolution.
期刊介绍:
Extreme Mechanics Letters (EML) enables rapid communication of research that highlights the role of mechanics in multi-disciplinary areas across materials science, physics, chemistry, biology, medicine and engineering. Emphasis is on the impact, depth and originality of new concepts, methods and observations at the forefront of applied sciences.