Kim Se-Ho, Antonov Stoichko, Zhou Xuyang, Stephenson Leigh T, Jung Chanwon, El-Zoka Ayman A, Schreiber Daniel K, Conroy Michele, Gault Baptiste
Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung Düsseldorf Germany
Energy and Environment Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory P.O. Box 999 Richland WA 99352 USA.
J Mater Chem A Mater. 2022 Jan 27;10(9):4926-4935. doi: 10.1039/d1ta10050e. eCollection 2022 Mar 1.
The worldwide development of electric vehicles as well as large-scale or grid-scale energy storage to compensate for the intermittent nature of renewable energy generation has led to a surge of interest in battery technology. Understanding the factors controlling battery capacity and, critically, their degradation mechanisms to ensure long-term, sustainable and safe operation requires detailed knowledge of their microstructure and chemistry, and their evolution under operating conditions, on the nanoscale. Atom probe tomography (APT) provides compositional mapping of materials in three dimensions with sub-nanometre resolution, and is poised to play a key role in battery research. However, APT is underpinned by an intense electric field that can drive lithium migration, and many battery materials are reactive oxides, requiring careful handling and sample transfer. Here, we report on the analysis of both anode and cathode materials and show that electric-field driven migration can be suppressed by using shielding by embedding powder particles in a metallic matrix or by using a thin conducting surface layer. We demonstrate that for a typical cathode material, cryogenic specimen preparation and transport under ultra-high vacuum leads to major delithiation of the specimen during the analysis. In contrast, the transport of specimens through air enables the analysis of the material. Finally, we discuss the possible physical underpinnings and discuss ways forward to enable shielding from the electric field, which helps address the challenges inherent to the APT analysis of battery materials.
电动汽车在全球范围内的发展,以及用于补偿可再生能源发电间歇性的大规模或电网规模储能的发展,引发了人们对电池技术的浓厚兴趣。要了解控制电池容量的因素,以及至关重要的确保长期、可持续和安全运行的电池退化机制,需要详细了解其微观结构和化学性质,以及它们在纳米尺度下运行条件下的演变。原子探针断层扫描(APT)能够以亚纳米分辨率提供材料的三维成分映射,有望在电池研究中发挥关键作用。然而,APT是基于一个能够驱动锂迁移的强电场,并且许多电池材料是活性氧化物,这需要小心处理和样品转移。在此,我们报告了对阳极和阴极材料的分析,并表明通过将粉末颗粒嵌入金属基体中进行屏蔽或使用薄导电表面层,可以抑制电场驱动的迁移。我们证明,对于典型的阴极材料,在超高真空下进行低温样品制备和传输会导致样品在分析过程中发生大量脱锂。相比之下,通过空气传输样品能够对材料进行分析。最后,我们讨论了可能的物理基础,并探讨了实现电场屏蔽的方法,这有助于应对电池材料APT分析所固有的挑战。