4.5 Article

Identification of Degradation Mechanisms by Post-Mortem Analysis for High Power and High Energy Commercial Li-Ion Cells after Electric Vehicle Aging

Journal

BATTERIES-BASEL
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/batteries7030048

Keywords

Li-ion; battery; aging; degradation mechanisms; post mortem analysis

Funding

  1. research center CEA LITEN
  2. European project TEESMAT [814106]
  3. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Russian Federation [AAAA-A19-119012990095-0]

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Driven by the rise of the electric automotive industry, the Li-ion battery market is expanding rapidly, but serious performance degradation occurs during aging, with different aging mechanisms favored under different operational conditions leading to performance decay.
Driven by the rise of the electric automotive industry, the Li-ion battery market is in strong expansion. This technology does not only fulfill the requirements of electric mobility, but is also found in most portable electric devices. Even though Li-ion batteries are known for their numerous advantages, they undergo serious performance degradation during their aging, and more particularly when used in specific conditions such as at low temperature or high charging current rates. Depending on the operational conditions, different aging mechanisms are favored and can induce physical and chemical modifications of the internal components, leading to performance decay. In this article, the identification of the degradation mechanisms was carried out thanks to an in-depth ante- and post mortem study on three high power and high energy commercial 18,650 cells. Li-ion cells were aged using a battery electric vehicle (BEV) aging profile at -20 degrees C, 0 degrees C, 25 degrees C, and 45 degrees C in accordance with the international standard IEC 62-660, and in calendar aging mode at 45 degrees C and SOC 100%. Internal components recovered from fresh and aged cells were investigated through different electrochemical (half-coin cell), chemical (EDX, GD-OES, NMR), and topological (SEM) characterization techniques. The influence of power and energy cells' internal design and Si content in the negative electrode on cell aging has been highlighted vis-a-vis the capacity and power fade.

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