Affiliation:
1. Clean Energy Automotive Engineering Center and School of Automotive Studies Tongji University 4800 Cao'an Road Shanghai 201804 China
2. High Performance Materials Institute Florida State University Tallahassee FL 32310 USA
3. Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division Argonne National Laboratory Lemont IL 60439 USA
4. Department of Electrical Engineering University at Buffalo The State University of New York Buffalo NY 14260 USA
Abstract
AbstractDeveloping high‐capacity electrodes requires the evaluation of electrochemical behaviors with an increasing current density. Currently, the current density for evaluation of high‐capacity electrodes has reached a new stage where the polarization at the lithium counter electrode has become a technical barrier for the accurate evaluation of battery electrodes, resulting in severe performance and mechanism mischaracterizations. Here, the accurate electrochemical behavior for high‐capacity electrodes via a single‐channel three‐electrode vehicle is decoupled, by which the impact of lithium counter electrode is minimized. The testing high‐capacity graphite electrode is capable of delivering an excellent rate capability with 81.7% capacity retention at 0.3 C, as well as stable cycling performance retaining 97.5% practical reversible capacity after 225 cycles, much higher than the graphite electrode tested with traditional half‐cell testing vehicle but in close agreement with the results obtained from a well‐matched full cell, reflecting accurate electrochemical performance evaluations of high‐capacity electrodes. Moreover, detailed electrochemical mechanisms of impedance and diffusion properties for working electrodes are also successfully decoupled individually. This work uncovers the mismatch between traditional evaluation configuration and increasing testing current density and provides a guideline for accurate electrochemical evaluation for ever‐increasing high‐capacity electrodes, which is of great significance for high‐energy lithium or other alkali‐metal ion batteries.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
Vehicle Technologies Office
Argonne National Laboratory
U.S. Department of Energy
Subject
General Materials Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Cited by
32 articles.
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