Slow Voltage Relaxation of Silicon Nanoparticles with a Chemo-Mechanical Core-Shell Model
Lukas K\"obbing, Yannick Kuhn, Birger Horstmann

TL;DR
This paper introduces a chemo-mechanical core-shell model to explain slow voltage relaxation and hysteresis in silicon nanoparticle anodes, highlighting the role of visco-elastoplastic shell behavior and fitting experimental observations.
Contribution
The study develops a novel chemo-mechanical continuum model that explains silicon voltage hysteresis and relaxation, outperforming previous empirical models.
Findings
Voltage relaxes logarithmically over days, fitting Garofalo law.
Shell's visco-elastoplastic behavior accounts for hysteresis.
Model provides accurate voltage profile estimations.
Abstract
Silicon presents itself as a high-capacity anode material for lithium-ion batteries with a promising future. The high ability for lithiation comes along with massive volume changes and a problematic voltage hysteresis, causing reduced efficiency, detrimental heat generation, and a complicated state-of-charge estimation. During slow cycling, amorphous silicon nanoparticles show a larger voltage hysteresis than after relaxation periods. Interestingly, the voltage relaxes for at least several days, which has not been physically explained so far. We apply a chemo-mechanical continuum model in a core-shell geometry interpreted as a silicon particle covered by the solid-electrolyte interphase to account for the hysteresis phenomena. The silicon core (de)lithiates during every cycle while the covering shell is chemically inactive. The visco-elastoplastic behavior of the shell explains the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCarbon Nanotubes in Composites · Silicon Nanostructures and Photoluminescence · Nanowire Synthesis and Applications
