화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Power Sources, Vol.272, 1154-1161, 2014
Degradation of lithium ion batteries employing graphite negatives and nickel-cobalt-manganese oxide plus spinel manganese oxide positives: Part 2, chemical-mechanical degradation model
Capacity fade is reported for 1.5 Ah Li-ion batteries containing a mixture of Li-Ni-Co-Mn oxide (NCM) + Li-Mn oxide spine! (LMO) as positive electrode material and a graphite negative electrode. The batteries were cycled at a wide range of temperatures (10 degrees C-46 degrees C) and discharge currents (0.5C-6.5C). The measured capacity losses were fit to a simple physics-based model which calculates lithium inventory loss from two related mechanisms: (1) mechanical degradation at the graphite anode particle surface caused by diffusion-induced stresses (DIS) and (2) chemical degradation caused by lithium loss to continued growth of the solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI). These two mechanisms are coupled because lithium is consumed through SEI formation on newly exposed crack surfaces. The growth of crack surface area is modeled as a fatigue phenomenon due to the cyclic stresses generated by repeated lithium insertion and de-insertion of graphite particles. This coupled chemical-mechanical degradation model is consistent with the observed capacity loss features for the NCM + LMO/graphite cells. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.