4.7 Article

Non-destructive local degradation detection in large format lithium-ion battery cells using reversible strain heterogeneity

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENERGY STORAGE
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.est.2021.102788

Keywords

Electric vehicle; Lithium-ion battery; Capacity drop; Non-invasive detection; Strain heterogeneity

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51975312]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2019YFE0100200]

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This study demonstrates the potential of reversible strain heterogeneity as a non-destructive tool for local degradation analysis of large format lithium-ion battery cells. Post-mortem analysis revealed that gas bubbles produced by severe side reactions between graphite particles and electrolyte, as well as heat in regions with high impedance, were responsible for abnormal expansion and sudden capacity drop in aged unconstrained cells. The quick spread of defective regions led to the sudden capacity drop, confirming the usefulness of reversible strain distribution in monitoring battery degradation.
Heterogeneous degradation is a key challenge faced in the production of large format lithium-ion battery (LIB) cells, and is difficult to evaluate non-destructively. This study demonstrates that reversible strain heterogeneity has the potential of becoming a useful non-destructive tool for local degradation analysis of large format LIB cells. A commercial 59.5 Ah LIB cell with a Li[Ni0.6Co0.2Mn0.2]O-2 (NCM622) cathode and graphite anode was degraded at 1.3C current with and without external constraint. The aged unconstrained cells experienced a sudden capacity drop and abnormal expansion at certain locations during discharging at 87% SOH (state of health), which was not observed for the constrained ones. Detailed post-mortem analysis was carried out to understand the capacity drop mechanism. The abnormal expansion was ascribed to the gas bubbles produced by localized severe side reactions between the graphite particles and electrolyte, and the significant heat in certain regions with high impedance. The quick spread of the defective regions was responsible for the sudden capacity drop. This work confirms that the reversible strain distribution contains useful information inside the battery and can help monitor battery degradation and capacity drop.

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