The Effect of Mechanical Strain on Lithium Staging in Graphene
Joshua V. Pondick, Sajad Yazdani, Milad Yarali, Serrae N. Reed, David, J. Hynek, Judy J. Cha

TL;DR
This study investigates how mechanical strain influences lithium intercalation and staging in graphene, revealing that strain can delay phase formation and impact battery performance, highlighting strain engineering as a tool to control electrochemical behavior.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that mechanical strain significantly affects lithium staging in graphene, providing new insights into nanoscale intercalation dynamics and phase transition control.
Findings
Strain increases electrochemical potential for lithium staging by up to 1.26 V.
Mechanical strain energy scales with the fourth power of graphene thickness.
Strain delays lithium phase formation, impacting battery cycling and power.
Abstract
Lithium intercalation into graphite is the foundation for the lithium-ion battery, and the thermodynamics of the lithiation of graphitic electrodes have been heavily investigated. Intercalated lithium in bulk graphite undergoes structural ordering known as staging to minimize electrostatic repulsions within the crystal lattice. While this process is well-understood for bulk graphite, confinement effects become important at the nanoscale, which can significantly impact the electrochemistry of nanostructured electrodes. Therefore, graphene offers a model platform to study intercalation dynamics at the nanoscale by combining on-chip device fabrication and electrochemical intercalation with in situ characterization. We show that microscale mechanical strain significantly affects the formation of ordered lithium phases in graphene. In situ Raman spectroscopy of graphene microflakes…
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