Phase-field modeling on the diffusion-driven processes in metallic conductors and lithium-ion batteries
Jay Santoki

TL;DR
This paper explores phase-field modeling of diffusion-driven processes in energy devices, focusing on lithium-ion batteries and metallic conductors, demonstrating the method's ability to capture essential physical phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces phase-field modeling as an effective approach to simulate diffusion-driven processes in energy conversion and transmission materials.
Findings
Phase-field models successfully simulate lithium insertion in batteries.
Morphological evolution under electromigration is effectively captured.
The approach provides insights into controlling material degradation.
Abstract
Diffusion-driven processes are important phenomena of materials science in the field of energy conversion and transmission. During the conversion from chemical energy to electrical energy, the species diffusion is generally linked to the rate of exchange, and hence to the performance of the conversion device. Alternatively, the transmission of the electric field diffuses the species when it passes through any medium. The consequences of this effect can be regulated to attune surface nano-patterns. Otherwise, uncontrolled morphologies may lead to permanent degradation of the metallic conductors. Therefore, the understanding of the material behavior, in the presence of the driving forces of the diffusional species, is of scientific interest. The presented dissertation proposes to investigate one example of species diffusion in each case, during energy conversion and transmission.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolidification and crystal growth phenomena · Aluminum Alloy Microstructure Properties · nanoparticles nucleation surface interactions
