4.8 Article

Grain boundary metal-insulator transitions in polycrystalline LiCoO2

Journal

JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES
Volume 547, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2022.231918

Keywords

Metal-insulator transition; Insulating grain boundaries; Phase field model of LCO; Phase transitions in LCO

Funding

  1. NSF DMR, USA [1305694]
  2. Toyota Research Institute, USA
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  4. Division Of Materials Research [1305694] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A thermodynamically consistent variational framework is developed to explain the metal-insulator transition in polycrystalline LiCoO(2) due to grain boundary lithium segregation, interfacial misorientation, and grain size. High-angle grain boundaries and curved grains favor the transformation to Li-rich phases. Insulating O3(I) phase wets high-angle grain boundaries similar to grain boundary premelting. Above a critical misorientation, the grain boundaries undergo the metal-insulating transition, leading to the formation of an insulating grain boundary network that suppresses the electrical conductivity of polycrystalline LCO. The fabrication of textured LCO microstructures with low grain boundary misorientations can delay the metal-insulator transition.
A thermodynamically consistent variational framework is developed to show that the metal-insulator transition in polycrystalline LiCoO(2)is driven by grain boundary lithium segregation, the interfacial misorientation, and the size of the abutting grains. In general, high-angle grain boundaries and grains possessing high curvature favor phase transformation to Li-rich phases. In particular, the insulating O3(I) phase wets high-angle grain boundaries in a manner analogous to grain boundary premelting, at least epsilon= 0.15 before the O3(II)-O3(I) equilibrium phase boundary, epsilon= 0.75. A critical misorientation as a function of the macroscopic lithium content, epsilon) exists above which the grain boundaries undergo a metal-insulating transition. The critical misorientation decreases with composition until at epsilon= 0.81, the percolation threshold is reached, forming an insulating grain boundary network that dramatically suppresses the electrical conductivity of polycrystalline LCO. The O3(I) phase extends into the O3(II) grain interiors through a diffusion-limited process , while the O3(II) phase extends into the H1-3 grain interiors through a phase transformation limited process. Results suggest that the fabrication of textured LCO microstructures will delay the metal-insulator transition. Specifically, textured microstructures exhibiting grain boundary misorientations < 6 will suppress the formation of the insulating O3(I) phase up to the O3(II)-O3(I) phase boundary, enabling the use of an additional 64.6 Wh/kg in specific energy density and 16.4 Ah/kg of charge between epsilon= 0.75 and= 0.81.

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