| Literature DB >> 25785517 |
Andrew J Leenheer1, Katherine L Jungjohann1, Kevin R Zavadil1, John P Sullivan1, C Thomas Harris1.
Abstract
Electrodeposited metallic lithium is an ideal negative battery electrode, but nonuniform microstructure evolution during cycling leads to degradation and safety issues. A better understanding of the Li plating and stripping processes is needed to enable practical Li-metal batteries. Here we use a custom microfabricated, sealed liquid cell for in situ scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) to image the first few cycles of lithium electrodeposition/dissolution in liquid aprotic electrolyte at submicron resolution. Cycling at current densities from 1 to 25 mA/cm(2) leads to variations in grain structure, with higher current densities giving a more needle-like, higher surface area deposit. The effect of the electron beam was explored, and it was found that, even with minimal beam exposure, beam-induced surface film formation could alter the Li microstructure. The electrochemical dissolution was seen to initiate from isolated points on grains rather than uniformly across the Li surface, due to the stabilizing solid electrolyte interphase surface film. We discuss the implications for operando STEM liquid-cell imaging and Li-battery applications.Entities:
Keywords: electron beam radiolysis; in situ TEM; liquid-cell electron microscopy; lithium electrodeposition; lithium-ion battery; solid electrolyte interphase
Year: 2015 PMID: 25785517 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b00876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881