A continuum, computational study of morphogenesis in lithium intermetallic interfaces
Mostafa Faghih Shojaei, Rahul Gulati, Krishna Garikipati

TL;DR
This study uses phase field modeling to explore and control the morphogenesis of lithium intermetallic interfaces in solid-state batteries, aiming to improve interface stability and battery performance.
Contribution
It introduces a computational framework combining first principles and experiments to study morphogenesis in lithium intermetallics, advancing interface design in solid-state batteries.
Findings
Li-Mg and Li-Zn intermetallics show distinct morphogenic behaviors.
Kinetics and cycling influence interface morphology and void formation.
The framework enables future detailed studies of electrolyte-anode interfaces.
Abstract
The design of solid state batteries with lithium anodes is attracting attention for the prospect of high capacity and improved safety over liquid electrolyte systems. The nature of transport with lithium as the current carrier has as a consequence the accretion or stripping away of the anode with every charge-discharge cycle. While this poses challenges from the growth of protrusions (dendrites) to loss of contact, there lurks an opportunity: Morphogenesis at the anode-electrolyte interface layer can be studied, and may ultimately be controlled as a factor in solid state battery design. The accessible interface morphologies, the dynamic paths to them, and mechanisms to control them expand considerably if lithium alloys are introduced in the anode. The thermodynamics and kinetics of lithium intermetallics present principled approaches for morphogenic interface design. In this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetallurgical and Alloy Processes
