4.6 Article

Probing the Role of Electrode Microstructure in the Lithium-Ion Battery Thermal Behavior

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ELECTROCHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 164, Issue 11, Pages E3146-E3158

Publisher

ELECTROCHEMICAL SOC INC
DOI: 10.1149/2.0161711jes

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Funding

  1. U. S. Department of Energy (DOE) Computer Aided Engineering for Batteries (CAEBAT III) program

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Safety and performance of lithium-ion batteries over a wide temperature window are of paramount importance, especially for electric vehicles. The safety concerns are predicated on the thermal behavior as the occurrence of local temperature excursions may lead to thermal runaway. In this work, the role of electrode microstructure and implications on the cell thermal behavior are examined. A microstructure-aware electrochemical-thermal coupled model has been proposed, which delineates the electrode-level thermal complexations due to the structure-transport-electrochemistry interactions. Detailed analysis of the spatio-temporal variation of the heat generation rates (ohmic, reaction and reversible contributions) for different electrode microstructural configurations is presented to explain the dominant factors causing temperature rise. The tradeoff between the cell performance and safety is discussed from an electrode-level, bottom-up view point. This study aims to provide valuable insights into potentially tuning electrode-level structural features as an internal safety switch toward limiting the Li-ion cell temperature rise during operation. (C) The Author(s) 2017. Published by ECS. All rights reserved.

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