Journal
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 153, Issue 13, Pages -Publisher
AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0023611
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Funding
- Advanced Research Projects Agency Energy (ARPA-E) [DE-AR0001211]
- Carnegie Mellon University Manufacturing Futures Initiative
- Richard King Mellon Foundation
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Electrochemical kinetics at electrode-electrolyte interfaces limit the performance of devices including fuel cells and batteries. While the importance of moving beyond Butler-Volmer kinetics and incorporating the effect of electronic density of states of the electrode has been recognized, a unified framework that incorporates these aspects directly into electrochemical performance models is still lacking. In this work, we explicitly account for the density functional theory-calculated density of states numerically in calculating electrochemical reaction rates for a variety of electrode-electrolyte interfaces. We first show the utility of this for two cases related to Li metal electrodeposition and stripping on a Li surface and a Cu surface (anode-free configuration). The deviation in reaction rates is minor for cases with flat densities of states such as Li, but is significant for Cu due to nondispersive d-bands creating large variation. Finally, we consider a semiconducting case of a solid-electrolyte interphase consisting of LiF and Li2CO3 and note the importance of the Fermi level at the interface pinned by the redox reaction occurring there. We identify the asymmetry in reaction rates as a function of discharge/charge naturally within this approach.
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