Abstract
The galvanostatic intermittent titration technique (GITT), introduced in 1977 by Weppner and Huggins, provided a readily accessible means to measuring the chemical diffusion coefficient of electrochemical electrode materials. The method continues to be widely used today, but the reported diffusivity values are highly inconsistent, ranging as much as four orders of magnitude for some Li layered oxide compositions. Even qualitative trends of diffusivity are inconsistent, suggesting significant flaws in the implementation of the method. Other variants of the GITT method also suffer from similar inconsistency problems. Here we identify numerous sources of significant error including composition-dependent reaction overpotentials, mathematical flaws in the relaxation analysis methods, finite-size and non-planar geometry effects, inter-particle inhomogeneity issues, early transient effects, and surface area uncertainties. We propose a simple relaxation analysis scheme using the time variable
t
relax
+
τ
−
t
relax
, where t
relax is relaxation time and τ is the galvanostatic pulse duration. We also propose to use dense diffusion-limited samples to isolate the bulk-diffusion process in the time domain. Chemical diffusivity can be extracted much more reliably with this improved implementation of the GITT method.
Funder
Toyota Research Institute
Publisher
The Electrochemical Society
Subject
Materials Chemistry,Electrochemistry,Surfaces, Coatings and Films,Condensed Matter Physics,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
39 articles.
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